China: New Fuel Efficiency Standards Tougher Than Those of U.S. 
 Oct 10, 2004 
 http://www.greencarcongress.com 

 AP. After years of discussion, China has enacted fuel
 efficiency standards that are stricter than those in
 the U.S. Not only are the mileage requirements higher,
 but every vehicle sold must meet the standard of its category. 

 From an analysis by US PIRG: 
 42Kb, 3 page PDF http://www.uspirg.org/energy/DontbeFueled7.pdf 

 China's new fuel economy standards require
 32 different car and truck weight-based classes to achieve
 between 19 and 38 mpg by 2005, and
 between 21 and 43 mpg by 2008.
 Only 79% of U.S. car sales and 27% of U.S. light truck sales
 currently meet China's 2005 standards.
 Only 19% of car sales and 14% of truck sales
 currently meet China's 2008 standard.

 China's new standards prescribe a maximum level of
 fuel consumption for every vehicle within each
 weight class, meaning that every automobile produced
 in a particular weight class has to meet the fuel
 economy standard set for that weight class.
 The U.S. fuel economy system, on the other hand,
 only requires that car and light truck sales averages
 meet fuel economy standards for each class. In China,
 if the automobiles do not meet the prescribed standards,
 they simply cannot be sold.

 Models approved by the Chinese government before July 2005
 will have a one-year grace period for both phases.
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