Car manufacturers' changing political strategies on the ZEV mandate

Publication date

2014-07-28

Authors

Wesseling, JoeriORCID 0000-0003-4648-5640ISNI 0000000419544788
Farla, JaccoORCID 0000-0002-6629-8706ISNI 0000000389549237
Sperling, D.
Hekkert, Marko P.ORCID 0000-0003-0570-5117ISNI 0000000139241969

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

We ask how incumbent car manufacturers and their political coalitions changed their political strategy with respect to the Californian zero emission vehicle mandate over the period 2000-2013. Building on the Corporate Political Activities literature we conceptualize firms' political strategies and their underlying tactics and actions. Our longitudinal case study builds on a dataset comprising governmental reports, documents, and public hearing transcripts, letters from industry, and complementary interviews with stakeholders. We find that car manufacturers became less defensive over time and more proactive and compliant in their political strategies towards the zero emission vehicle mandate. Car manufacturers' coalitions on the other hand, remain relatively defensive in their political actions as they continue to do the manufacturers' "dirty work". We provide insights in the Corporate Political Activities used to influence policymakers. To deal with industry opposition to policy interventions, our research suggests that policy makers might focus their interaction with industry on individual firms instead of industry associations, craft policies that stimulate competition between firms to break apart their closed industry front, and complement technology-forcing policies with demand-pull initiatives.

Keywords

Corporate Political Activity, Incumbent, Opposition, Political strategy, Zero emission vehicle, ZEV mandate, Taverne, Transportation, General Environmental Science

Citation

Wesseling, J H, Farla, J C M, Sperling, D & Hekkert, M P 2014, 'Car manufacturers' changing political strategies on the ZEV mandate', Transportation research. Part D, Transport and environment, vol. 33, no. December 2014, pp. 196-209. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trd.2014.06.006