Countries around the world are hitting Russia where it hurts: the country’s oil profits. Plus, EU officials really want European car companies to be eligible for U.S. electric-car tax credits, and the number of people using bike-sharing services across America has risen beyond pre-pandemic levels. All this and more in for Monday December 5th 2022.
Since Russia invaded Ukraine back in March, countries around the world have stepped in to place sanctions on the aggressor nation and its high-ranking officials. From to halting shipments in and out of Russia, it’s all part of a global effort to dry up the funding for Putin’s war. Now, G7 countries are ramping things up a notch further.
that today, G7 countries (including the U.S., Australia and EU member states) will implement . The limit, set at $60 per barrel, is meant to increase economic pressure on the Kremlin while avoiding excess damage to global oil supplies.
The benchmark crude oil price currently sits around $87 per barrel today, so the price limit set up by the G7 undercuts Russia by around 30 percent. However, that “Russia has said it will not accept a price cap and has threatened to cut off supplies to countries that comply with the arrangement.”
A price cap isn’t the only action being taken: EU member states are going one step further by banning most Russian oil imports entirely. The New York Times reports:
“The second is an embargo under which European nations will no longer be able to buy most Russian crude as of Monday. It was a step that the European Union had agreed to months ago but that it phased in to prepare member nations.”
This ban on crude oil imports could be expanded in the coming weeks. The New York Times adds that the EU plans to expand the ban to include “refined products from Russia, like diesel,” which could come into force in February 2023.
If we want to move away from our reliance on oil, . And, here in the U.S., lawmakers have been unveiling new policies to expand our use of biofuels. These include an increase in usage requirements for biofuels, as well as a way for automakers to class their EVs as being biofuel-powered.
It sounds odd, but the new plan is all about EV makers proving that the energy that powers their electric vehicles is coming from clean sources. If they are able to show that it has been generated by “biofuels like landfill or agricultural methane,” they will earn credits. :
“The EPA hopes to use the reset to introduce a pathway for EV makers to generate credits. That would recognize the possibility that EVs could be charged using power from the grid generated by biofuels like landfill or agricultural methane.
“The EPA proposal foresees electric vehicle manufacturers — like Tesla Inc. for example — generating as many as 600 million credits called e-RINs in 2024, and 1.2 billion of them by 2025. Under the scheme, one e-RIN would be generated for every 6.5 biofuel-powered kilowatt hours in an EV battery.”
As well as the new focus on biofuel and EVs, the new plan also requires refiners to produce 20.82 billion gallons of biofuels in 2023, 21.87 billion gallons in 2024, and 22.68 billion gallons in 2025.
The Biden administration did a great job earlier this year by. It was a step that could make electric cars more affordable for more people. But the rule stipulates that only American-made cars can qualify for the tax break, which did a good job of annoying pretty much every other country in the process.
Now, European Union officials are meeting with U.S. trade representatives to hash out new trade deals and talk about how damaging could be for automakers based in the EU’s 27 member states. :
“The 27-country bloc fears the $430-billion Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) with its generous tax credits of $7,500 for Tesla (TSLA.O), Ford (F.N) and other North American-made EVs will significantly damage European automakers.
“French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said he and German economy minister Robert Habeck have started talks with their U.S. counterparts on exemption for all EU-made green products. But he also said the EU needed its own equivalent of the IRA.”
The latest wave of negativity towards the Inflation Reduction Act follows French president Emmanuel Macron’s comments that it was a “job killer” for Europe. South Korean officials also criticized the Act at the G20 Summit in Indonesia last month.
United Auto Worker union members have begun electing a new board of directors. So far, reformers have taken six out of a possible 14 seats on the union’s International Executive Board, and could be on track to win a majority, according to unofficial results posted early on Sunday. that they could be on track to “win as many as eight, including the presidency, and control a majority, depending on the outcome of three runoff elections.”
The six challengers elected so far are part of a slate called UAW Members United. They campaigned on taking a “more confrontational stance” in bargaining talks with . The AP reports:
“They want to rescind concessions made to companies in previous contract talks, restoring cost-of-living pay raises and eliminating a two-tier wage and benefit system.
“The adversarial stance is likely to raise costs for General Motors, Ford and Stellantis, which almost certainly would be passed on to consumers. Even without the election, costs likely would have gone up as workers seek a bigger share of billions of dollars in profits.”
UAW members were also voting on a new president. So far, incumbent Ray Curry defeated challenger Shawn Fain with 38.2% and 37.6% of the vote respectively. However, as neither was able to secure a majority, there will be a runoff election in January.
Since the pandemic started, it feels like there’s been nothing but bad news to report across public transport. and people are much happier taking their cars if it means avoiding small spacesloaded with strangers. But, it turns out there’s one area of public transit that is doing well: bikesharing.
According to , usage of bikeshares like New York’s CitiBike program is on the rise.
Between its peak in 2019 and the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, bikeshare ridership in the U.S. fell 24 percent. But now, Bloomberg reports that “bikeshare systems in Chicago, New York, and Philadelphia were beating ridership records, and across the country ridership was up 18% compared to 2019.”
As well as a rise in overall rider numbers on such services, Bloomberg also spotted changes in the way riders use these shared bikes. The site reports:
“There are signs that across modes, the pandemic has had a lasting impact on who rides, how, and when. In 2020, all micromobility modes made more trips to and from essential services, like hospitals and grocery stores, as riding emerged as an open-air local transportation option. Meanwhile, the commuting patterns that characterized 2019 trips — with spikes in ridership in the morning and again in the evening — shifted as many professionals went remote in 2020 and 2021, with daily ridership increasing somewhat steadily until the end of evening rush hour.”
It’s a positive sign that increasing rider numbers might not be just a flash in the pan and could, instead, be a lasting trend for the new ways people want to get around town.
Now, if only there was decent cycling infrastructure around U.S. cities, then we could show how many people really want to get out on their shared bikes.
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I love cycling, both on city streets and mountain trails - and everywhere in between, to be honest. But, there are a lot of reasons why people might not want to take to two wheels. With bikeshare ridership on the rise, I’d love to know whether you’ve hopped on a bicycle to do some of your commuting or errand-running. Why or why not?