Religious Leaders a Driving Force Behind Campaign
for FuelEfficient Cars
November 20, 2002
by Jan Nunley
DETROIT Full of post-modern irony and
a touch of Madison Avenue sass, the "What would Jesus drive?"
campaign launched in November by the Evangelical Environmental Network
(EEN) has already captured the attention of the media and a broad
coalition of religious leaders hopes they can capture the attention of
the U.S. auto industry at the same time.
Leaders of an umbrella group known as the Interfaith
Climate and Energy Campaign (ICEC), carrying an open letter from over
100 heads of denominations and senior religious leaders from 21 states,
met with Ford, General Motors, and DaimlerChrysler executives and leadership
at the United Auto Workers in Detroit on November 20 to ask the U.S. automobile
industry to build more fuel-efficient cars.
Among the signers, who spanned the theological
and denominational spectrum, were the Rev. Dr. Bob Edgar, General Secretary
of the National Council of Churches, Presiding Bishop Frank T. Griswold
of the Episcopal Church and Presiding Bishop Mark Hanson of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America.
The letter sounded some traditional environmental
themes pollution from vehicles has a major impact on human health
and the rest of God's creation; it contributes significantly to the threat
of global warming but added a concern that resonates with the public
mood since the attacks of September 11: that U.S. reliance on imported
oil from unstable regions threatens peace and security.
"What specific pledges in volume,
timing, and commitments to marketing will you make to produce automobiles,
SUVs, and pick-up trucks with substantially greater fuel economy?"
the letter asked.
You Make It, We'll Buy It
The delegation arrived in front of General Motors
headquarters in downtown Detroit in a convoy of fuel-efficient Toyota
Priuses, owned and driven by the Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary
from Monroe, Michigan. Portions of the "What Would Jesus Drive?"
slogan were emblazoned on the hood, back, top and sides of each of the
electric-hybrid cars.
"If you in the American auto industry manufacture
and market more clean cars, we in the American religious community will
not only tell our people about it, but we'll have prepared them to embrace
such a change," said David Saperstein, director of the Religious
Action Center of Reform Judaism in Washington.
Representatives of GM and Ford told reporters
they looked forward to a dialogue with religious leaders on fuel efficiency.
GM has said it hopes to have nonpolluting hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles
on the road by the end of the decade. Ford plans to phase out one of its
least-efficient SUVs (sport utility vehicles), the Excursion, and introduce
a hybrid gas-electric version of its Escape small SUV designed to achieve
about 40 miles per gallon (mpg).
Uphill Climb
Still, the faith-based drive for fuel-efficient
cars is an uphill climb.
The Environmental Protection Agency has cited
the Honda Insight and Toyota Prius hybrids as the 2003 models with the
highest fuel economy over 50 miles per gallon. But minivans, SUVs
and pickup trucks accounted for half the new vehicles sold in the United
States last year, with the average fuel economy for all 2003 models at
20.8 mpg.
In September the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers
reported that purchases of "light trucks," a category that includes
minivans and SUVs, exceeded passenger car sales for the third year in
a row. "We already offer three dozen different models that get 30
miles to the gallon or better," said Eron Shosteck, a spokesman for
the Washington-based alliance. "Very few people buy them...They want
cars they can multi-task in."
The National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) has sent a draft proposal for new Corporate Average Fuel Economy
(CAFE) standards to improve fuel efficiency for light-duty vehicles, including
SUVs, to the White House Office of Management and Budget. The final plan
is expected to be approved by April 1. But the NHTSA plan only calls for
an annual improvement of half a mile per gallon over three years, raising
the light-truck standard to 22.2 mpg from the current 20.7 mpg target,
which has been in place for the last 20 years.
"Raising fuel economy standards for new
cars, SUVs and other light trucks to an average of 40 miles per gallon
over the next 10 years would save nearly 2 mbd [million barrels a day]
in 2012 and nearly 4 mbd by 2020 more oil per day than we import
from the Persian Gulf and could extract from the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge [ANWR], combined," says a "fact sheet" on CAFE standards
produced by the Interfaith Climate and Energy Campaign. "Making the
Ford Explorer go from 19 mpg to 34 mpg would cost $935 in technology,
but would save the owner $790 each year on gas. Raising CAFE standards
for new cars, SUVs and other light trucks to 40 mpg over the next 10 years
will save consumers $16 billion annually by 2012."
Drilling in ANWR, a measure already defeated
twice in Congress, is expected to be revived in the next, attached to
a "filibuster-proof" budget reconciliation bill for 2004, according
to John Johnson, domestic policy analyst for the Episcopal Church's Office
of Government Relations.
Lord of the Highway, Too
The WWJDrive ad campaign comes even as the Chevrolet
division of GM, maker of such SUVs as the TrailBlazer, came in for both
praise and criticism for its sponsorship of a Christian music tour. The
television spots, which will run in a limited number of markets, ask:
"So if we love our neighbor and we cherish God's creation, maybe
we should ask, What would Jesus drive?'" In several Boston
suburbs, protestors have gathered on auto dealership "strips"
with signs urging car buyers to steer away from gas hogs.
Each page of the EEN website carries a header
declaring the campaign to be "a discussion initiated by the Evangelical
Environmental Network & Creation Care Magazine...because transportation
is a moral issue." Not only is it a moral issue, for the Rev. Jim
Ball, executive director of EEN, it's an issue of Christian faithfulness.
A "Call to Action" addressed specifically
to Christian leaders frames the issue in the Christ-centered language
familiar to evangelicals. "As Christians we confess Jesus Christ
as our Savior and Lord. The Lordship of Christ extends throughout every
area of our life," it begins. "Nothing is excluded from His
Lordship. This includes our transportation choices. The Risen Lord Jesus
is concerned about the kinds of cars we drive because they affect his
people and his creation."
"Stewardship of creation ... has been emerging
over the last few years as a more important piece of the agenda for many
religious communities," the Rev. Robert Massie, an Episcopal priest
in Boston and executive director of CERES, a national environmental coalition,
told the Christian Science Monitor. Though different groups state different
reasons for participating Jews quote the Torah, evangelical and
charismatic Protestants quote the Bible, Roman Catholics and mainline
Protestants cite the social justice imperatives of their faiths
the consensus on this one issue is unprecedented in modern interfaith
and ecumenical history.
Personal Commitment
The EEN's Call to Action asks Christians to take
concrete steps of their own. First, it asks for a personal commitment
to walk, bike, car-pool and use public transportation whenever possible,
even choosing a home with transportation options in mind, and to encourage
others to do the same.
Next, Christians should "purchase the most
fuel efficient and least polluting vehicle available that truly fits their
needs" and donate the fuel savings to missions. Gas-guzzling SUVs
"should be purchased only by those who truly need them, such as individuals
in rural areas and those genuinely needing 4-wheel drive."
Finally, churches and individual Christians are
asked to lobby government and auto manufacturers for more fuel-efficient
transportation options, including raising fuel economy (or CAFE) standards
to 40 miles per gallon by 2012 and supporting research and development
for hydrogen fuel cells and other alternative technologies.
"American investors know that socially responsible
investments have greater returns than what are seen in their quarterly
statements," said Johnson. "People of faith across the country
get this. When will Wall Street?"
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