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On Monday, US President George W Bush requested a draft of
federal rules in order to to cut petrol use and greenhouse gas emissions for
passenger cars.
On April 2 a US Supreme Court ruling affirmed a role for the
federal government in setting limits on greenhouse gas emissions under a 1990 US clean-air
law.
Bush said regulations should be based on his proposal to cut
US
petrol use by 20 per cent over the next decade, a target laid out in his State
of the Union speech in January.
"We're taking action, by taking the first steps toward
rules that will make our economy stronger, our environment cleaner, and our
nation more secure for generations to come," he told reporters at the
White House.
Federal rule-making "is an important first step ... in
addressing greenhouse gas emissions from automobiles," EPA head Stephen
Johnson told reporters.
Although, White House spokesman Tony Snow said that Bush
remains opposed to mandatory nationwide caps on greenhouse gas emissions, such
as those set by the UN Kyoto Protocol. "The market-based approach seems to
have worked," Snow said. "So the president's position is still the
same."
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