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Freedom From Oil Campaigners Crash GM CEO’s Speech at San Francisco’s Commonwealth Club Wagoner refuses to sign pledge to make GM most fuel efficient carmaker SAN FRANCISCO--Activists with the Freedom From Oil Campaign interrupted General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner's speech on green cars today at San Francisco's Commonwealth Club, urging him to sign a pledge to make his company the auto industry's fuel efficiency leader by 2012. Wagoner refused, just as he did at the 2006 Los Angeles auto show when asked to sign a similar fuel efficiency pledge.
"Wagoner's speech today was all smoke and mirrors," said Nick Magel of Global Exchange. "Twenty million people who will be buying new cars this year deserve the choice of affordable, union-made cars that don't guzzle gas and pollute. Besides, with gas at $4 per gallon, the only people that can afford to buy GM's gas guzzlers are those on Wagoner's pay scale."
"Rick Wagoner can wax poetic on GM's commitment to the environment, but his actions show that his only real commitment is to business-as-usual," said Jodie Van Horn of Rainforest Action Network. "Wagoner's double talk might play well in the boardroom, but Californians want real solutions to our addiction to oil."
Increased fuel efficiency will save consumers money at the pump, tighten national security by reducing the nation's reliance on oil, and help curb global warming by reducing greenhouse gas emission. Automakers could reach a 40-mpg standard using available technologies to improve conventional gasoline vehicles, 55 mpg by making the majority of their passenger vehicles hybrid-electrics, and up to 100 mpg by building a fleet of plug-in hybrids.
For more information, visit www.ran.org/what_we_do/freedom_from_oil/ or www.globalexchange.org/war_peace_democracy/oil/ ###
The Freedom From Oil Campaign is working to end America's oil addiction, stop oil wars, and curb global warming by convincing the auto industry to dramatically improve fuel efficiency and eliminate vehicle greenhouse gas emissions. Launched by RAN, Global Exchange, and the Ruckus Society in 2003, the campaign is pushing automakers to break their addiction to oil, create more jobs, and meet consumer demand for green cars by producing more fuel efficient vehicles. |