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Hilgers Sues Truck Manufacturers for Conspiring to Force Transition to Electric Trucks

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Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers

Attorney General Hilgers filed an antitrust lawsuit against some of the nationโ€™s largest heavy-duty truck manufacturers for an alleged plot to stifle the availability of internal-combustion semi-trucks in favor of electric ones. California has imposed a series of regulations designed to essentially eliminate semi-trucks with internal combustion engines. Other states have adopted Californiaโ€™s regulations as well. Rather than push back or simply compete in the marketplace, heavy-duty truck manufacturers colluded to sign an agreement called the โ€œClean Truck Partnership.โ€ The agreement commits the signatory manufacturers not to oppose additional state-level electric-truck mandates and to restrict output of diesel-powered semi-trucks in lockstep, even if a court rules that the regulations are unlawful.

โ€œEliminating diesel-powered semi-trucks is practically impossible to accomplish and would impose enormous costs on Nebraska and Nebraska companies. That is why Nebraska sued California officials from issuing an anti-democratic regulation to eliminate diesel-powered semis in their state. Unfortunately, these heavy-duty truck manufacturers, who dominate the market in Nebraska, have agreed to go along with Californiaโ€™s edictโ€”even if Nebraska is successful in overturning the regulation. These manufacturersโ€™ collusion will raise prices, reduce output, increase costs on Nebraskans, and is a classic antitrust violation,โ€ said Attorney General Hilgers.

Earlier this year, Attorney General Hilgers spearheaded a 17-state coalition to block Californiaโ€™s Advanced Clean Fleets regulation, which imposes an outright ban on the sale of internal-combustion trucks. Under the Clean Truck Partnership, the truck manufacturers have pledged to abide by Advanced Clean Fleets, among other state-level electric-truck mandates, even if Nebraskaโ€™s challenge is successful. The antitrust lawsuit alleges that truck manufacturers have illegally conspired to anticompetitively reduce the output of internal-combustion trucks to protect their own economic interests.

โ€œThe logistics industry is a foundational piece of Nebraskaโ€™s economyโ€”from employing thousands of Nebraskans to ensuring that Nebraskaโ€™s agriculture and liquid fuel products can get to purchasers around the country and world. Whether it is California or collusive corporations, I will continue to fight misguided and anti-democratic policies that threaten to devastate Nebraskaโ€™s trucking and biofuel industries, raise prices for consumers, and impact jobs across Nebraska and the country,โ€ stated Attorney General Hilgers.

In addition to Nebraska, the Energy Marketers of America and Renewable Fuels Nebraska joined as co-plaintiffs in the lawsuit against Daimler, Navistar, Paccar, Volvo, and the Truck and Engine Manufacturers Association.