FILE PHOTO: A mail carrier delivers the mail in Pearl, Mississippi, U.S. January 15, 2020. REUTERS/Veronica G. Cardenas/File Photo

February 2, 2022

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The White House and Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday urged the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) to reconsider its plan to buy a new multi-billion-dollar fleet of primarily gasoline-powered delivery vehicles.

The Environmental Protection Agency sent a letter to the Postal Service on Wednesday urging it to hold a new hearing on its 10-year contract with Oshkosh Corp that could be worth $6 billion or more to build up to 165,000 next-generation delivery vehicles.

White House Council on Environmental Quality chair Brenda Mallory said in a letter https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/USPS_letter_02022022.pdf that EPA “has communicated grave concerns with the adequacy of the environmental review that the USPS has conducted to date.” She urged USPS to complete a supplemental environmental impact statement.

A USPS spokeswoman declined comment.

USPS awarded a $482 million contract to Oshkosh’s defense unit, which will make the next-generation vehicles, in February 2021 that could ultimately be worth $6 billion.

U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy previously told lawmakers the agency was committed to having electric vehicles make up 10% of its next-generation fleet as part of its multibillion-dollar plan to retire its 30-year-old delivery vehicles.

The EPA said USPS’ proposed new gas-powered vehicles “are expected to achieve only 8.6 miles per gallon (mpg), barely improving over the decades old long-life vehicles that

achieve 8.2 mpg.”

EPA said greenhouse gas emissions from the gas-vehicles “will total nearly 20 million metric tons of carbon dioxide” over 20 years and the present value of the climate damages from these emissions would exceed $900 million.

EPA wants USPS to first purchase the “full minimum committed” EV volume before purchasing new gas-powered vehicles and also purchase commercially available electric vehicles for some routes.

The Sierra Club praised the Biden administration effort. “Shifting to a 100% electric Postal Service is a no-brainer. Electric mail trucks will reduce noise, air, and climate pollution in communities across the nation, while slashing fueling costs,” the environmental group said.

Biden’s spending and climate bill would award $6 billion for USPS to purchase electric delivery vehicles and infrastructure. USPS has said with the funding that “all delivery fleet acquisitions could feasibly be electric by 2028, and a corresponding 70% of our entire delivery fleet by” 2030 could be EVs.

Mallory wrote Wednesday that the White House supports USPS “using its existing resources, including its significant cash reserve or through a credit strategy, to invest in our nation’s health, environment and competitiveness.”

The contract allows for delivery of between 50,000 and 165,000 of the vehicles over 10 years.

The USPS rejected a proposal from electric-vehicle maker Workhorse Group.

DeJoy said last year USPS had agreed to spend $500 million on the next-generation vehicles to make them convertible to EVs from internal-combustion models at a future date.

(Reporting by David Shepardson and Chris Gallagher; Editing by Tim Ahmann and Aurora Ellis)


Source: One America News Network

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