The Borneo Post

EU rules have failed to cut car CO2 emissions – Report

-

Bigger, more-powerful cars have negated the impact of tighter CO2 emissions regulation­s in the EU, a report by the bloc’s internal auditor found Thursday.

Since 2012, cars sold in the EU must meet targets for limiting CO2 emissions, but these had li le impact as emissions from diesel vehicles since then held steady while there was only a small decrease of 4.6 per cent for petrol vehicles, according to a report by the European Court of Auditors.

“Continuous improvemen­ts in engine technology and the introducti­on of hybrid powertrain­s have made engines more efficient, but the increased vehicle mass coupled with more powerful engines outweighs the technologi­cal progress made,” said the report.

It calculated the average car mass increased by around 10 per cent between 2011 and 2022, while engine power rose by 25 per cent.

New car emissions only began to drop significan­tly in 2020.

“This was mainly due to a significan­t uptake of electric vehicles, while real-world CO2 emissions from cars with combustion engines have not dropped,” said the report.

It also put the blame for the poor result of the regulation­s on loopholes that allowed laboratory testing rather than in real world conditions, which automakers exploited to their advantage and led to huge gaps with emissions on the road.

This blew up in the face of automakers in 2015 when US regulators called out Volkswagen for using so ware to reduce emissions during laboratory tests in a costly scandal that became known as Dieselgate.

New tests were subsequent­ly

Continuous improvemen­ts in engine technology and the introducti­on of hybrid powertrain­s have made engines more efficient, but the increased vehicle mass coupled with more powerful engines outweighs the technologi­cal progress made.

EU internal auditor report

introduced which narrowed but did not eliminate the gap with real world driving conditions.

The report noted that while the EU has managed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in many areas over the past three decades, CO2 emissions in the transport sector have continued to grow as the vehicle fleet has grown and emissions per vehicle have not fallen.

It said the transport sector accounted for 23 per cent of the EU’s total greenhouse gas emissions in 2021, with passenger cars responsibl­e for more than half.

 ?? — Bloomberg photo by Angel Garcia ?? An XEV Yoyo electric vehicle charges at an Autosi car dealership in Granollers, Spain.
— Bloomberg photo by Angel Garcia An XEV Yoyo electric vehicle charges at an Autosi car dealership in Granollers, Spain.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia