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cover of episode New EPA Rules, White House Targets Xylazine, Inflation Slows Down

New EPA Rules, White House Targets Xylazine, Inflation Slows Down

2023/4/12
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Michael Regan: EPA 推出更严格的汽车尾气排放标准,旨在通过加速向电动汽车转型来应对气候变化,目标是在2032年实现三分之二的新车为电动汽车。 这项政策旨在减少污染和温室气体排放,因为交通运输是美国最大的二氧化碳排放源。Regan 强调了采取迅速行动以应对气候危机的重要性,并为子孙后代留下更健康、更安全的世界的必要性。 Camilla Dominovsky: EPA 的新尾气排放标准极其严格,实际上要求汽车制造商大幅增加电动汽车产量,以满足平均排放要求。虽然面临技术、基础设施和供应链等挑战,但政府的支持(包括对电池工厂、矿物和充电器的资金支持)以及加州和欧盟的电动汽车强制性政策,以及行业本身向电动汽车转型的趋势,使得这一目标在一定程度上具有可行性。然而,汽车行业对此表示谨慎乐观。 Brian Mann: 白宫呼吁迅速采取行动,应对芬太尼和齐拉西汀(俗称Trank)混合药物的蔓延。这种混合药物导致美国各地过量服用药物死亡人数激增,尤其是在南部各州,过量服用齐拉西汀相关的死亡人数在一年内增长了1000%。政府计划增加检测以确定齐拉西汀在全国各地毒品供应中的流行程度,并增加对受这些合成药物影响的人的医疗治疗的研究资金。此外,政府还可能进一步加强对齐拉西汀的监管,但这将很复杂,因为齐拉西汀是一种兽医常用的合法药物。与此同时,一些人对政府可能采取的刑事司法措施表示担忧,认为这可能会对需要医疗服务的人造成不利影响。 Scott Horsley: 虽然最新的通货膨胀数据显示物价上涨速度有所放缓,但通货膨胀仍然高于美联储的目标水平。服务业价格上涨是持续高通胀的主要原因之一。美联储可能还会继续加息,但幅度可能较小,因为银行放贷趋于谨慎,这会放大美联储加息的影响,并对经济起到进一步的抑制作用。美联储需要谨慎地决定利率应该上升到多高,因为当前经济形势存在着各种不确定性和风险。

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The EPA is proposing the toughest ever rules on tailpipe emissions, aiming for two-thirds of new vehicles sold in the US to be electric by 2032. This is a significant leap from the current 7% and presents huge challenges, including infrastructure, battery production, and mineral sourcing. The auto industry's response is mixed, with some acknowledging the inevitability of electrification but questioning the speed of the transition.
  • EPA proposes toughest ever tailpipe emission rules
  • Aims for 66% electric vehicles by 2032
  • Challenges include infrastructure, battery production, mineral sourcing
  • Auto industry acknowledges electrification but questions speed

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The Environmental Protection Agency unveils stricter rules on auto pollution. Will this push more people to buy electric cars? The Biden administration wants two-thirds of all passenger vehicles sold in the U.S. to be electric by 2032. I'm Layla Faldin, that's Michelle Martin, and this is Up First from NPR News.

Drug dealers are mixing animal tranquilizers with fentanyl and it's spreading across the U.S. I'm deeply concerned about what is this drug mean for the nation. What can the White House do to stop this dangerous street drug from killing more Americans? Inflation numbers are getting better, but are people feeling it in their wallets? The economy's still coming back from bizarro COVID times. Stay with us. We'll give you the news you need to start your day.

The auto industry is moving towards electric vehicles. The big question is, how fast should it go? Well, the Environmental Protection Agency has chimed in with its answer, which is very fast. The agency just proposed the toughest ever rules around tailpipe emissions. It's actually a big push to get the auto industry to focus on electric vehicles. Yesterday, EPA Administrator Michael Regan laid out why. The stakes cannot be higher. We must continue to act with haste

and ambition to confront the climate crisis and to leave all our children

like my nine-year-old son Matthew, a healthier and safer world. As for how the EPA plans to do that, NPR's Camilla Dominovsky is here to tell us. Thank goodness. Good morning. Good morning, Michelle. So what exactly is the EPA announcing today? All right. So these are proposed tailpipe emissions standards. And these tailpipe emissions include both pollution, like smog, right, stuff that makes people sick.

and greenhouse gases. Transportation is the single biggest source of carbon dioxide emissions in the U.S., which is fueling catastrophic climate change. So these are regulations that cover both of these things, and they are about to get, under this proposal, significantly stricter. So if I have this right, though, Camilla, hasn't the EPA been trying to make cars cleaner for some time now? I'm thinking decades. So what's different about this?

So the standards are going to take a huge leap in terms of how strict they are. And the way these standards work, it's not like every single vehicle has to meet the standard. It's that on average, the whole fleet of cars that a company makes has to meet them. And the new standards are going to be so strict that hypothetically,

hypothetically, a company can meet them however they want. They're technology neutral standards. That's what they're called. But realistically, they're going to have to make electric vehicles to bring that average down low enough to comply. Now, I'm going to throw some numbers at you about how many electric vehicles we're talking. A few years ago, electric vehicles were about 2% of new car sales in the US. Right now, 7%.

The EPA is looking at 2032. That's nine years from now. And they're envisioning a U.S. where two-thirds of new vehicles are electric. Okay, wow. So is that even feasible? At a minimum, it's really feasible.

really, really hard. It's not just about making the vehicles, which is its own challenge. It's having chargers for all of them, electricity to power those chargers. It's having batteries to put in them. It's having minerals for those batteries. The challenge here is huge.

What the EPA would say is that the government is also providing a lot of support for the transition. There is funding for battery plants and minerals and chargers, right? California and the EU have electric car mandates, slightly different structure, but they have policies that are going to require electric vehicles as well. Lots of companies were going in this direction anyway.

just not maybe as quickly. So the EPA says if you factor all that in, it is feasible. The auto industry says maybe. Okay, as briefly as you can, what's next? Well, there's going to be a comment period. These are proposed standards, so expect to hear about feasibility. There will also almost certainly be a political fight, possibly a legal one. The current version of these standards, which is nowhere near as strict, is being challenged in court by red states led by Texas.

One thing that I'll note is interesting about that. The auto industry has actually chimed in to defend the EPA's right to set these standards, and they called the shift toward electrification, not necessarily the speed, but the overall direction, inevitable. That is NPR's Camilla Dominovsky. Camilla, thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

The White House is calling for swift action on an illegal street drug that, hard to believe, is growing even more deadly. Already, 100,000 people are dying each year from drug overdoses. And now the administration is raising the alarm on a synthetic drug cocktail of fentanyl and an animal tranquilizer called xylosine that's poisoning even more Americans.

NPR's Brian Mann covers addiction for us, and he's with us now to tell us more. Brian, good morning. Good morning, Michelle. So we've been hearing about xylosine over the last year. What's new here? Well, what's happening is this mixture of fentanyl and xylosine, which is known on the street as Trank, is just spreading really fast. It used to be mostly a problem in the Northeast. Now it's really everywhere, with federal officials reporting a 1,000% increase in xylosine-related overdose deaths in southern states in a single year.

So speaking with reporters, the White House drug czar, Dr. Rahul Gupta, said it's time to act. This is the first time in our nation's history that a substance is being designated as an emerging threat by any administration. So Gupta says they'll notify Congress about this threat today and will then roll out a plan to fight this drug cocktail. That plan will come out over the next 90 days. So, Brian, I do want to hear about this plan. But first, can you just tell us why these drugs are so popular if they're this deadly? How are they spreading so fast?

Yeah, well, like other synthetic drugs, xylosine is super cheap for drug cartels to make. And then when it's mixed with fentanyl, it can deepen and prolong the sense of euphoria experienced by drug users. So that combination has kind of supercharged the spread of Trank. But the human toll is devastating. Addiction to this drug is really powerful. It's hard to escape.

And frequent xylosine users suffer terrible wounds when they inject the drug. Again, here's Dr. Gupta. People are often ending up having to either have amputations of their limbs or having deep ulcers, infections, sepsis, and oftentimes are admitted to intensive care units

And the presence of xylosine also complicates treatment of people experiencing opioid overdoses involving heroin or fentanyl. Sometimes typical methods for saving people's lives just aren't working. It sounds really dire. So what does the Biden administration plan to do? Well, the first goal is to ramp up testing to just identify where xylosine is prevalent in drug supply across the country. This is sort of like COVID testing during the pandemic. Public health officials need to find out where people are most likely to get sick.

Biden administration also wants more funding for research for medical treatments for people affected by these synthetic drugs. And it is also likely the government's going to further regulate xylosine, which is going to be complicated, Michelle, because this is a drug used legally, regularly by veterinarians as an animal tranquilizer. And fentanyl is already a political flashpoint. So let's talk about the criminal justice side of this. Is there talk of cracking down, for example, on dealers selling these synthetic drugs?

Well, Gupta says it may make sense for Congress to increase criminal penalties. And this part of the federal response worries some people like Maritza Perez Medina with the Drug Policy Alliance. Here she is. We're really targeting people who could benefit from health services. So that's my overall concern with like the direction that the federal government is

is taking, specifically Congress, with criminalizing these emerging substances. And one last thought, Michelle. People say there are more and more of these deadly synthetic drugs like xylosine, like fentanyl, likely to turn up on American streets in the months and years ahead. That is NPR addiction correspondent Brian Mann. Brian, thank you. Thank you.

New inflation numbers out this morning are expected to show that the pace of price hikes slowed a bit last month. Yeah, but people's wallets are still being stretched and the rising cost of services, travel, restaurant meals could keep inflation uncomfortably high for some time to come. NPR's Scott Horsley is with us now with a preview of today's inflation report. Good morning, Scott.

Good morning. So I understand from you that prices are still going up, but not as fast as they were last summer. What else can we learn from today's report? It is expected to show some improvement. Annual inflation peaked at just over 9% last June. It was 6% in February. And forecasters think it will be closer to 5% in March. So it is moving in the right direction.

But that means prices are still climbing about two and a half times as fast as the Federal Reserve would like. Yesterday, the International Monetary Fund cited stubbornly high inflation and rising interest rates around the world as some of the factors that are weighing on global economic growth. But Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who is attending the IMF meetings this week, tried to put a more positive spin on the story. Commodity prices have eased. Supply chain snarls are being resolved.

The global financial system has generally proven quite resilient

In fact, the IMF actually raised its forecast for the U.S. economy this year, although it's still predicting pretty lackluster GDP growth of about 1.6%. It kind of feels like I've been asking you this month after month, so sorry for that. But what is keeping inflation so high? It's been a moving target. When inflation first spiked back in 2021, it was mostly driven by runaway demand for stuff and supply chains that just couldn't keep up.

Then last year, of course, Russia invaded Ukraine and we saw the price of energy and food skyrocket. As Yellen noted, a lot of those goods prices have since come back to earth and we're not buying as much stuff anymore. But

But Austin Goolsbee, who's one of the newest members of the Fed's rate-setting committee, says people are still spending money on services, and that's creating a new inflation headache. The economy's still coming back from bizarro COVID times. Travel, hotels, restaurants, leisure, recreation, entertainment. Demand has returned, and the inflation has proved positive.

particularly persistent. And Goolsbee warns services prices may not be as responsive to the Fed's main inflation-fighting tool, which is higher interest rates. So just one more thing. Are Fed watchers still expecting the central bank to raise interest rates again?

Maybe. Right now, betting markets think the Fed will raise interest rates by another quarter percentage point at its next meeting in three weeks. But that could be the last rate hike for a while. Since the collapse of Silicon Valley and Signature Banks last month, other lenders have gotten stingier about making loans.

And that amplifies the Fed's rate hikes and acts like another break on the economy. So Goolsbee says he and his colleagues have to be careful about how high rates should go. The Fed's job is to be more paranoid than anyone else. That's what they pay us for.

In unluckier times, more interesting times like the times we're in right now with wild shocks and financial stresses, it means we have to dig into loads of new information. And today's inflation report is one key piece of information for the Fed. That is NPR Scott Horsley. Scott, thank you. You're welcome.

And that's Up First for Wednesday, April 12th. I'm Michelle Martin. And I'm Laila Faldil. Up First is produced by Katie Klein and David West. Our editors are Mohamed El-Berdisi and Ali Schweitzer. Our technical director is Zach Coleman. Start your day here with us again tomorrow.

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