Home Industry NewsUS proposes boosting

US proposes boosting

by Autobayng News Team
0 comments
banner
us-proposes-boosting

  • Published On Feb 11, 2026 at 05:13 PM IST

The Trump administration has pursued policies to boost the sale of gas-powered vehicles and cut EV incentives for automakers and consumers.

“>

The Trump administration has pursued policies to boost the sale of gas-powered vehicles and cut EV incentives for automakers and consumers.

US Transportation Department said on Tuesday it is proposing to boost American content in federally funded electric vehicle charging stations from 55 per cent to up to 100 per cent and require them to be produced in the United States, which could pose significant ‌hurdles to the ⁠use of the ⁠funds. The Biden administration in 2023 agreed to waive some “Buy America” requirements for the $5 billion government-funded program to roll out more electric vehicle charging stations. The proposal – first reported by Reuters – would take immediate effect once the changes are finalized. The department said it believes manufacturers have the capacity to produce EV chargers in US facilities, which will “protect Americans from foreign-made EV charger components that use technology with cybersecurity vulnerabilities.”

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the increase in content requirements will “strengthen domestic manufacturing, generate new American jobs, make US businesses more competitive, and ⁠address potential ‌national security concerns.” The Sierra Club called the proposal another bad-faith attempt to kill the program by the Trump administration and could prevent funds from being used.

“It would stall EV ⁠charging deployment, push the United States further behind, and deny communities access to clean, affordable transportation options,” the group said. During the Biden administration, the Transportation Department’s Federal Highway Administration waived US content requirements for steel, iron and construction materials for EV charging stations, which some Republicans said would result in US taxpayers subsidizing Chinese-made products.

Judge ruled against trump administration

Last month, US District Judge Tana Lin ruled President Donald Trump’s administration unlawfully suspended funding awarded to support the expansion of electric vehicle charger infrastructure, in a victory for 20 Democratic-led states that sued over the action. The states ‌sued the Transportation Department after it suspended in February an EV charger infrastructure program enacted by Congress in 2021 under Democratic President Joe Biden. Duffy said the department has updated EV charging guidance and made it easier for ⁠states to build chargers, resulting in nearly double the number of charging ports completed during the Biden administration. “If Congress wants to see these chargers built, we put America First,” Duffy said.

Soon after Duffy took office, the department suspended the $5 billion National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Formula Program, which was part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that Biden signed into law in 2021.

The Trump administration has pursued policies to boost the sale of gas-powered vehicles and cut EV incentives for automakers and consumers. A funding bill approved in January by Congress redirected $879 million in funds approved under Biden for the EV charging network to other infrastructure priorities.

  • Published On Feb 11, 2026 at 05:13 PM IST

Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals.

Subscribe to Newsletter to get latest insights & analysis in your inbox.

All about ETAuto industry right on your smartphone!

banner

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Adblock Detected

Please support us by disabling your AdBlocker extension from your browsers for our website.