EU to legislate for greener cars

A vehicle passes a sign for the new Low Emissions Zone at Coulsdon in London February 3, 2008. Large vehicles that do not meet specific emission standards will be charged to travel within the London-wide zone, with the stated aim of improving the capital's air quality. The scheme comes into effect on Monday. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor(BRITAIN)

A vehicle passes a sign for the new Low Emissions Zone at Coulsdon in London February 3, 2008. Large vehicles that do not meet specific emission standards will be charged to travel within the London-wide zone, with the stated aim of improving the capital's air quality. The scheme comes into effect on Monday. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor(BRITAIN)

Published Jun 7, 2012

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The European Commission is set to propose tighter carbon-emissions standards for new EU cars, according to a draft proposal that is likely to divide the auto industry.

The proposal, expected to be made public in July, would make binding a 2020 goal to lower carbon dioxide emissions to an average of 95g/km.

So far it is only a provisional, non-binding goal and compares with an existing, binding target of 130g/km.

Some industry representatives have said tougher binding standards would be extremely challenging.

Others have said they are achievable and would help to make the 27-country European Union's struggling car industry more competitive as international rivals catch up with environmental standards.

The draft says: “This regulation sets a target of 95g/km as average emission for the new car fleet.”

Fines for non-compliance would be kept at existing levels of €95 (R990) for every gram over target per vehicle.

The draft also proposes setting long-term CO2 standards for new passenger cars for 2025 and 2030 by December 31, 2014 at the latest, if such further targets are then deemed appropriate.

As part of its efforts to tackle greenhouse gas emissions, the EU in 2009 adopted rules that require carmakers to cut average car emissions to 130g/km of CO2 by 2015.

Carmakers are on course to meet that.

Road transport is one of the few sectors with rapidly rising emissions. Between 1990 and 2008, emissions from the sector increased by 26 percent, according to figures from the Commission, the bloc's executive arm.

An impact assessment on the proposed new law says a roughly 25 percent reduction in car and van fuel consumption would save an estimated €25 billion euros (R260 billion) a year.

It also says estimated fuel savings from implementing the 2020 target would more than compensate for the expected cost of compliance.

For the average driver, fuel savings of about €500 (R5200) a year would stem from the 95-gram target in 2020, based on a driving distance of 20 000km a year and a fuel cost of €1.4 (R14.60) a litre.

The Commission proposal, once made public, will have to go through a long EU legislative process before it can take effect.

The Commission refuses to comment on proposals before they are officially made public.

CAMPAIGNERS WANT EVEN MORE

Consumer groups and environmental campaigners are keen for tighter standards and some want the Commission to be more daring.

Greg Archer, programme manager at the T&E transport campaign group, said: “Tighter CO2 standards mean spending less at the pump - but drivers have been short-changed. The EU can and must go further by tightening the 2020 target to 80g/km and introducing a target for 2025.”

Some in the car industry have called for more flexibility on environmental standards to help ease costs for a sector struggling with overcapacity, an economic downturn and tough competition from beyond Europe.

“LEVEL THE PLAYING FIELD”

Cars 21, a policy group that gathers ministers from EU member states, auto executives, EU commissioners and trade union representatives, met on Wednesday and adopted a report on its vision to revive the industry.

Sergio Marchionne, president of the car industry association ACEA and CEO of Fiat, said it was essential to implement the findings of the report and particularly to ensure a level playing field in terms of international trade.

The industry says that following an EU free-trade agreement with South Korea that began to take effect in July 2011, 150 000 more South Korean cars were on European roads.

Marchionne said trade negotiations with Japan had been discussed at Wednesday's Cats 21 meeting.

“It's an issue that is first and foremost on our minds,” he said. “We need to be very careful before we open ourselves up to any other exposure when the economic underpinning is as weak as it is.” - Reuters

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