Toronto Star

Diesel cars are ‘finished’ in Europe

Exec at EU regulator says the body has had ‘breakthrou­gh moment’

- JONATHAN STEARNS AND EWA KRUKOWSKA

BRUSSELS— European Union consumers may do as much as regulators to propel the region’s car sector into the electricit­y-powered age foreseen by Tesla Inc., according to the EU’s industrial-policy chief.

European commission­er Elzbieta Bienkowska said the EU has had a “breakthrou­gh moment” since Germany-based Volkswagen AG admitted in 2015 that it fitted diesel engines with software to cheat U.S. checks on smog-causing discharges of nitrogen oxides (NOx). This deeply affected “the emotions in society toward emissions and cleaner cars,” she said.

“Diesel cars are finished,” Bienkowska said in a May 24 interview. “I think in several years they will completely disappear. This is the technology of the past.”

The auto-emissions scandal may help the EU gear up for a technologi­cal revolution in road transport. Europe is seeking to retain leadership in the worldwide market for passenger cars in the face of competitio­n from the U.S., where Tesla is based, and China, which accounts for about half of electricve­hicle sales.

Tighter rules

VW’s cheating, which the U.S. uncovered and led Germany to order an EU-wide recall of 8.5 million Volkswagen vehicles, pushed the world’s No. 1 carmaker into a crisis and left policy-makers in Europe scrambling to patch up regulatory holes. Bienkowska’s services were subsequent­ly notified of possible engine-management irregulari­ties in more die- sel cars, including some by Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV.

The issue has been politicall­y thorny in Europe, because about half the cars in the region are powered by diesel — which causes more urban pollution than gasoline while having less global-warming impact — and because many member states have struggled to meet cleanair goals meant to reduce human sicknesses and premature deaths.

“People have realized that we will never have completely clean — without NOx — diesel cars,” said Bienkowska, who comes from Poland.

Last week, EU government­s backed a revamp of the rules for authorizin­g car models in the 28-nation bloc. The European Commission, the EU’s regulatory arm, won the power to fine automakers up to 30,000 euros ($45,400) per faulty car and order recalls as part of the more centralize­d market oversight, becoming more like the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

Carmaker ‘arrogance’

Bienkowska said “arrogance” by carmakers, coupled with their traditiona­lly close ties to national government­s, meant the draft law was initially greeted as if the industry wrongdoing had been insignific­ant. Gradually, she said, attitudes changed. “I am really a little bit less frustrated than I was a year ago,” Bienkowska said. “During this denial phase, it was awful.”

Adding to the optimism is an initiative by the commission and industry to spur the developmen­t in Europe of batteries for electric cars, including through financing. European companies seeking to get a foothold in the market include BMW AG, Daimler AG, BASF SE and Vattenfall AB.

“We want to have the first batteries produced in Europe, but also the whole value chain,” Bienkowska said. “It’s the kind of a project that a single member state cannot afford.”

Individual European companies are doing their part, too.

VW, which aims to sell as many as three million allelectri­c cars annually by 2025, has awarded 40 billion euros in contracts to battery producers. The deals take the company to within striking distance of its target to lock down 50 billion euros in supplies.

European electric-vehicle sales, now about 1.5 per cent of all new registrati­ons on the continent, will rise to about 5 per cent in 2021 and take off from 2025, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

European incentives

EU policy to fight climate change may also play a role, albeit in a more nuanced way than China’s approach of im- posing quotas. A draft European law to tighten caps on car discharges of carbon dioxide offers incentives for automakers to shift to electric vehicles.

In the meantime, Bienkowska must continue to tackle the haziness and headaches of the diesel age. She’s stepping up legal threats against several EU countries, including Germany and Italy, for lax enforcemen­t of the previously agreed European rules meant to ensure carmakers heed NOx limits.

Bienkowska is also urging a number of EU nations, particular­ly in eastern Europe, to increase recalls of vehicles suspected of failing to meet NOx standards. At present, eight member countries have mandatory recalls in place.

“We have member states like Romania, Slovakia and Poland where the recall rate is extremely low,” she said. “We don’t want those parts of Europe to be full of old diesel cars.”

 ?? FERDINAND OSTROP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Europe is seeking to retain leadership in the world passenger-car market in the face of competitio­n from the U.S. and China.
FERDINAND OSTROP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Europe is seeking to retain leadership in the world passenger-car market in the face of competitio­n from the U.S. and China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada