Germany could impose limited diesel car bans in
Plans to make public transport free in cities suffering from poor air quality
BERLIN: Germany’s government, which has steadfastly opposed barring heavily-polluting diesel cars from cities, is working on changes to allow driving bans on certain routes on an emergency basis, documents seen by Reuters showed.
Junior transport minister Norbert Barthle, a conservative, disclosed the shift in a reply to a parliamentary question by the Greens party, first reported by the Rheinische Post.
The plans come days before a German court rules on whether cities can implement bans which carmakers say could cut the resale value of up to 15 million vehicles in Europe’s largest car market, forcing manufacturers to pay for modifications.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government is under pressure to help 70 cities whose emissions violate European Union standards and is keen to find ways to avoid broad bans. “A new legal basis is to be established that would allow...
driving bans or restrictions on certain limited routes to protect human health against particulates or emissions (nitrogen oxide),” Barthle said in the reply.
“That would make possible for the first time route-limited, emergency measures to protect against particulates,” he said. The new rules could be finalised by the end of the year. Merkel has stressed the need to find solutions quickly for the affected cities and said she wants to avoid driving bans, which could anger drivers, by focusing on switching fleets of taxis and buses to electric propulsion.
Germany is also considering plans