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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; Healthcare decision planning important for CT residents; Debt dilemma poll: Hoosiers wrestle with college costs.

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Rural Wyoming needs more vocational teachers to sustain its workforce pipeline, Ohio environmental advocates fear harm from a proposal to open 40-thousand forest acres to fracking and rural communities build bike trail systems to promote nature, boost the economy.

Report: "Greening" Auto Industry Revives Midwest Manufacturing

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Monday, October 29, 2012   

DETROIT - Today's U.S. auto industry is very different than the one that almost went bankrupt three years ago, according to a new report from Center for American Progress. The Center says the combination of new fuel efficiency standards and the Midwestern manufacturing base has created close to 40,000 jobs in the last three years, making car parts in nearly 100 manufacturing plants, in Michigan alone.

The author of the report, Zoe Lipman, senior manager of New Energy Solutions, National Wildlife Federation, says by making "clean" parts that make cars more fuel-efficient, the auto industry is cutting pollution as well.

"The auto sector is, I think, the best example that we can 'man up' on climate change. We can combat climate change, while at the same time reviving our economy."

Lipman says all kinds of cars and trucks are being built now to be more fuel-efficient. She says that by 2025 cars, SUVs and pick-ups will use about half the gasoline that they use today, saving consumers more than $50 billion and creating half a million new jobs.

She says that in the future, people won't have to drive teeny-tiny cars to save gas: engineers in Michigan are "greening up" even the largest vehicles.

"Up in Saginaw, Michigan, a company named Nexteer added hundreds of jobs to build electric power steering for full-sized trucks. It improves fuel economy significantly."

According to Lipman, the start-stop technology that automatically cuts the engine of hybrid cars at stoplights is expected to be used on half of all cars and trucks within a couple of years.

She points out that for the first hybrid electric plug-in, the Chevy Volt, built in Michigan, sales have increased 300 percent this year over last. She says a dozen cars like the Volt will be hitting the market in the next year.

"These include vehicles like the Ford Focus electric; the new Prius plug-in electric; the Ford C-Max which is a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle, and which has just been rated 100 miles per gallon equivalent."

Lipman says the Midwest has proven that investing in clean energy works. The report says the "greening" of the auto industry has created 230,000 jobs since 2009, a 14 percent growth rate.

The report is at tinyurl.com/9lrgcpv.




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