Maine senator proposes electric vehicles for the department of defense

US military can play a role in reducing carbon emissions

Maine's independent senator has proposed that the U.S. military play a role in reducing carbon emissions by converting some vehicles to electricity.

Sen. Angus King's bill calls for transitioning the non-tactical fleet of the U.S. Department of Defense to electric and other zero-emission vehicle types. King said his proposal would require three quarters of non-tactical vehicles purchased by the department to be electric or zero-emission and made in the U.S.

Non-tactical vehicles include cars, vans and some trucks. The defense department is the world's largest institutional consumer of petroleum and causes more than half of the U.S. government's greenhouse gas emissions, King said.

THESE ELECTRIC VEHICLES ARE CHEAPER TO OWN THAN GAS ONES NOW

King sits on the Senate's armed services and energy and natural resources committees. He said his proposal "would be a significant step to reduce greenhouse gases, increase the resiliency of our national defense, and invest in America’s electric vehicle manufacturing."

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