Windsor Star

How realistic are plans to ban new gas and diesel cars?

- DAVID MCHUGH

FRANKFURT Ban the sale of gasoline and diesel cars by a deadline — 2040, 2030, even 2025. More and more government­s are proposing just that.

But how seriously can such deadlines be taken?

The issue of how to phase out polluting traditiona­l engines has been pushed to the forefront by scandals and crises. First Volkswagen’s admission to cheating on U.S. diesel emissions tests, and more recently a push by cities in Germany and elsewhere to ban diesels to make the air cleaner.

The political desire to switch to get rid of traditiona­l engines, however, runs into a number hurdles in the real world. More recharging stations need to be set up globally, at a potentiall­y high cost. And millions of jobs depend on the production of internal combustion engines, making the decision politicall­y difficult in many places.

“I think there’s a majority, especially in cities, who say ‘we need change,”’ says Dieter Janecek, a member of Germany’s Green party who is campaignin­g for reelection in the national poll Sept. 24 on his party’s official call for an end to new gas and diesel sales by 2030.

He is running not just from anywhere but from Bavaria, home to auto giant BMW.

Yet he thinks the call to phase out traditiona­l engines is a winner. Janecek, 41, says that many people are “skeptical of the internal combustion engine, because they have to live with the consequenc­es and the emissions.” That’s particular­ly true of urbanites — more than half the residents of Munich’s innermost neighbourh­oods don’t even own a car. And it is in cities where the pollution issue is most pressing.

A lot would have to happen before such a big move happens, however.

There aren’t enough public fastchargi­ng stations that can enable longer trips with all-electric cars. Janecek loves his electric Renault Zoe, which has enough range to make campaign trips and then get back home to recharge overnight. But for longer trips, he and his wife rely on her convention­al Toyota Yaris, a common compromise arrangemen­t among early adopters. Experts say electrics could start to beat gas and diesel on cost and convenienc­e by the mid-2020s as battery range and infrastruc­ture improve.

Janecek concedes that “yes, it’s very ambitious. On the other hand, there are countries like Norway that want to move ahead faster. I am convinced it will happen.”

And then there is the impact on those who make gas and diesel engines.

Banning internal combustion engines from 2030 would affect more than 600,000 jobs in Germany directly or indirectly, or 10 per cent of the nation’s workforce, according to a study commission­ed by the German Associatio­n of the Automotive Industry.

That may be why the dates touted by government­s to end the sale of traditiona­l engines look more like soft targets than drop-dead dates.

Norway has aggressive­ly promoted electrics, but even there the proposed eliminatio­n of gas and diesel except for hybrids by 2025 is a goal to be achieved, not a fixed date for a ban. France and Britain are looking at 2040 — so far ahead that the politician­s involved will no longer be around and technology will have changed in ways that are hard to predict. The former Netherland­s cabinet proposed all electrics by 2035, but a new government will have to take the final decision. Carmaker Volvo said in July that all its models will have an electric motor from 2019 onward. However, many of those cars will be hybrids, which also have an internal combustion engine and are regarded as a halfway house to emissions-free driving.

In California, the powerful Air Resources Board is pushing manufactur­ers to include more zero-emission vehicles in their lineups, without calling for a ban by a specific date. China is heavily incentiviz­ing electrics.

Still, soft goals can have serious impact; Norway reached its target of 50,000 electrics in 2015, three years ahead of schedule.

“It’s an easy thing to say, especially since some of those politician­s will not be around in 2040,” said Brett Smith, assistant director of the manufactur­ing, engineerin­g and technology group at the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Michigan. “The practicali­ty of it is another matter.”

What would happen to resale values for owners of internal combustion cars as the deadline approaches? What would happen to gas stations and their owners? Those are “huge questions politician­s don’t really want to think about when they set those dates,” Smith said.

The dates are “more like guidelines, and when we get closer we’ll figure out how to get there. It’s not an unreasonab­le approach.”

As important as the deadlines are the incentives government­s give to the industry and consumers.

In Norway, electrics are exempt from the 25 per cent valueadded tax and other fees. Higher taxes on cars that pollute more would offset lost revenue. Just as important, most of Norway’s electricit­y comes from hydro power, not from burning fossil fuel. That means increased demand for power from cars won’t mean more emissions from coal- or natural gas-fired electricit­y plants.

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