Antelope Valley Press

Will California hobble US railroad industry?

- Veronique de Rugy Commentary Veronique de Rugy is the George Gibbs Chair in Political Economy and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

American federalism is struggling. Federal rules are an overwhelmi­ng presence in every state government, and some states, due to their size or other leverage, can impose their own policies on much or all of the country. The problem has been made clearer by an under-the-radar plan to phase out diesel locomotive­s in California. If the federal government provides the state with a helping hand, it would bring nationwide repercussi­ons for a vital, overlooked industry.

Various industry and advocacy groups are lining up against California’s costly measure, calling on the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency to deny a waiver needed to fully implement it. In the past month, more than 30 leading conservati­ve organizati­ons and individual­s, hundreds of state and local chambers of commerce, and the US agricultur­al sector have pleaded with the EPA to help stop this piece of extremism from escaping one coastal state.

Railroads may not be something most Americans, whose attention is on their own cars and roads, think about often. But rail is the most basic infrastruc­ture of interstate commerce, accounting for around 40% of long-distance ton-miles. It’s also fairly clean, accounting for less than 1% of total US emissions. Private companies, like Union Pacific in the West or CSX in the East, pay for their infrastruc­ture and equipment. These facts haven’t stopped the regulatory power grab.

Most importantl­y, the California Air Resources Board regulation would have all freight trains operate in zero-emission configurat­ion by 2035. At the end of the decade, the state is mandating the retirement of diesel locomotive­s 23 years or older, despite typically useful lives of over 40 years. Starting in 2030, new passenger locomotive­s must operate with zero emissions, with new engines for long-haul freight trains following by 2035. It limits locomotive idling and increases reporting requiremen­ts.

Given the interstate nature of railway operations, California needs the EPA to grant a waiver. If the agency agrees, the policy will inevitably affect the entire continenta­l United States.

The kicker is that no technology exists today to enable railroads to comply with California’s diktat, rendering the whole exercise fanciful at best.

The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board explained last November that while Wabtec Corp. has introduced a pioneering advance in rail technology with the launch of the world’s first battery-powered locomotive, the dream of a freight train fully powered by batteries remains elusive. The challenges of substituti­ng diesel with batteries — primarily due to batteries’ substantia­l weight and volume — make it an impractica­l solution for long-haul trains. Additional­ly, the risk of battery overheatin­g and potential explosions, which can emit harmful gases, is a significan­t safety concern. As the editorial noted, “Even if the technology for zero-emission locomotive­s eventually arrives, railroads will have to test them over many years to guarantee their safety.”

The cost-benefit analysis is woefully unfavorabl­e to the forced displaceme­nt of diesel locomotive­s. To “help” the transition, beginning in 2026, CARB will force all railroads operating in California to deposit dollars into an escrow account managed by the state and frozen for the explicit pursuit of the green agenda. For large railroads, this figure will be a staggering $1.6 billion per year, whereas some smaller railroads will pay up to $5 million.

Many of these smaller companies have signaled that they will simply go out of business. For the large railroads, the requiremen­t will lock up about 20% of annual spending, money typically used for maintenanc­e and safety improvemen­ts.

Transporta­tion is the largest source of US emissions, yet railroads’ contributi­on amounts to not much more than a rounding error. The industry cites its efficiency improvemen­ts over time, allowing railroads today to move a ton of freight more than 500 miles on a single gallon of diesel. Its expensive machines, which last between 30 to 50 years and are retrofitte­d throughout their life cycles, are about 75% more efficient than long-haul trucks that carry a comparativ­e amount of freight.

As Patricia Patnode of the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute, which signed the aforementi­oned letter to the EPA, recently remarked, “Rather than abolish diesel trains, CARB should stand in awe of these marvels of energy-efficient transporta­tion.”

President Joe Biden talks a lot about trains, but his actions since taking office have consistent­ly punished the private companies we should value far more than state-supported Amtrak. In this case, EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan and the White House need not think too hard. They should wait for reality to catch up before imposing on the rest of us one state’s demands and ambitions.

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