When the Trump administration laid out a plan this year that would eventually allow cars to emit more pollution, automakers, the obvious winners from the proposal, baulked. The changes, they said, went too far even for them.
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| Marathon, the country’s largest oil refiner, has backed the Trump administration proposal to roll back car efficiency standards. |
But it turns out that there was a hidden beneficiary of the plan that was pushing for the changes all along: the nation’s oil industry.
In Congress, on Facebook and in statehouses nationwide, Marathon Petroleum, the country’s largest refiner, worked with powerful oil-industry groups and a conservative policy network financed by the billionaire industrialist Charles G. Koch to run a stealth campaign to roll back car emissions standards, a New York Times investigation has found.
The campaign’s main argument for significantly easing fuel efficiency standards — that the United States is so awash in oil it no longer needs to worry about energy conservation — clashed with decades of federal energy and environmental policy.
Read the story from The New York Times by Hiroko Tabuchi - “The Oil Industry’s Covert Campaign to Rewrite American Car Emissions Rules.”

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