Opti said:
In reply to alfadriver :
You mention I don't offer an alternative that isn't already being done. I do. Use these resources to go after something we can actually reduce, like industries that can emit as much as they want. You say it's already being done, that doesn't mean it wouldn't be more effective to shift resources to it.
What's been done in the past has led to only a tiny sliver of the population willing to break the law. That's great. We've had success, let's not throw a bunch more resources at it chasing the last diminishing returns.
I didn't say regulation as a whole is chasing dismissing returns. I said (or atleast meant) new regulation on new ICE engines and additional enforcement on emissions regulations is chasing diminishing returns
If you go back to my post on page 3 of this thread, you'll see that the transportation sector is still the largest producer of smog forming emissions in the US (55% of NOx), as well as being the largest single producer of GHG emissions in the US (29%). How does it make any sense to ignore that for other areas?
The "tiny sliver" of the population that's illegally modifying vehicles has the same impact as a much larger sliver of the population. That's why it's a problem. 500k deleted diesels + nearly every "tuned" vehicle on the road, cam swapped vehicle, vehicle running "gutted" cats, or a Chinese turbo, etc. They all add up, and suddenly the "tiny sliver of the population" is a lot larger than you realize, and their outsized impact is many, many times their actual numbers.
It really seems like you just want ICE's to be left alone for selfish reasons at this point. Your other arguments all seem pretty inconsistent and fragmented, so that's all I can really figure. I think pretty much all car people are at least a little conflicted about this stuff, so that's fair if you feel that way. Maybe your point just isn't coming across very well. The bottom line, is that it's going to be harder to sell emissions defeat devices in the US moving forward. You may not see it "changing consumer behavior" yet, but it's already begun and will only become harder and more obvious moving forward. The writing is on the wall. It may never get to 100% compliance, and I don't really see them chasing it to that point. But it will likely make a pretty significant dent in the number of non-compliant vehicles used on public roads over the next few years.
Simultaneously, other industries that pollute are undergoing similar transitions. It's not like the EPA is entirely focused only on personal vehicles. Even entire countries are making large scale changes. China is probably the world's largest market for renewable energy production right now. They've got a long way to go, but they're very interested in reducing their dependence on foreign oil and coal. Most of SE Asia is investing heavily in hydrogen fuel cell technology as well.