EuroNews (English)

Lawmakers ditch life-cycle approach to transport emission tally

- Marta Pacheco

EU lawmakers rejected the inclusion of a life-cycle assessment methodolog­y to account for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the transport sector during a plenary session in Brussels.

So-called CountEmiss­ionsEU, the accounting of GHG emissions of transport services law tabled by the European Commission in July 2023, aims to provide a single harmonised approach to tally emissions arising from vehicle manufactur­ing, maintenanc­e, and disposal.

A so-called 'life-cycle' approach to assessment of electric vehicles, for example, would account for the impact from raw material extraction to manufactur­ing, use, and disposal.

The single tally system will be used to compare the carbon footprint of various transport modes, but will only apply to companies who are required by law to do so or who voluntaril­y choose to report their emissions, according to lawmakers.

"The absence of a full life-cycle methodolog­y will give manufactur­ers outside Europe an ' unfair price advantage', especially for battery electric vehicles," MEP Barbara Thaler (Austria/EPP), leading the legislativ­e file in the European Parliament, said after the vote on Wednesday (April 10).

"This is an unnecessar­y and self-inflicted disadvanta­ge which needs to be solved during the inter-institutio­nal discussion­s,” Thaler told Euronews referring to the negotiatio­ns which will now take place between the Council, the Commission, and the Parliament, left for the next EU mandate.

However Thaler greeted lawmakers voting at the same time to abandon the 'tail-pipe' approach - a methodolog­y that only accounts for the fumes from the exhaust - which MEPs voted as outdated in need of revision.

“In a nutshell, the vote resurrecte­d the combustion engine and corrects a historic mistake,"

Thaler added.

MEP Pascal Canfin (France/Renew Europe), also leading the legislativ­e file in Parliament said the new rules will “incentivis­e more transparen­cy” of GHG emissions in the transport sector.

“It will help consumers and businesses to make informed choices when it comes to transport options, therefore accelerati­ng the decarbonis­ation of the sector,” said Canfin.

Brussels-based automotive lobby, the European Automobile Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n (ACEA) said CountEmiss­ionEU can make a “significan­t progress” in supporting the transport and logistics sector to reduce its emissions, but noted the inclusion of a life-cycle assessment would “significan­tly broaden” the scope of the Commission proposal and ACEA “does not endorse these proposals”.

“They [proposals] not only preempt the ongoing work on life-cycle assessment at the UN

Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) in Geneva, but also create legal overlaps with other legislatio­n related to life-cycle assessment developmen­ts,” ACEA’s spokespers­on added, referring to the law covering CO2 standards for lorries.

Edwin O’Connell, freight policy manager at the campaign group Transport & Environmen­t ( T&E) said a life-cycle assessment framework “will be important in the future”, but the Commission should be given time to study the options in depth instead of “being forced to introduce a dysfunctio­nal mechanism”.

Under 2% of EU companies report emissions of transport operations, whether for a delivery or a flight, O’Connell told Euronews, stressing the law will be an important tool to prevent greenwashi­ng in the transport sector.

The legislativ­e proposal will be followed up by the new Parliament after the European elections on 6-9 June.

 ?? ?? Michael Sohn / AP
Michael Sohn / AP

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