Oman Daily Observer

Court orders diesel vehicle ban on major Berlin roads

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BERLIN: Diesel drivers in Berlin faced the prospect of bans from major arterial roads as a court on Tuesday ordered the German capital must follow in the footsteps of Hamburg, Frankfurt and Stuttgart with exclusion zones.

A renewed focus on air quality in the wake of Volkswagen’s 2015 “dieselgate” scandal — in which the car giant admitted to cheating regulatory tests on 11 million cars worldwide — has seen a wave of courtroom action across Germany.

“The current clean air plan does not include sufficient measures to meet annual limits for nitrogen dioxide (NO2),” the Berlin judges said.

To bring down levels of the harmful pollutant, city authoritie­s “must order a driving ban for the streets where the threshold is not met,” targeting vehicles up to the Euro 5 emissions standard.

Definite exclusion zones include 11 stretches of major arteries like the north-south axis Friedrichs­trasse and the east-west Leipziger Strasse.

Meanwhile, the city-state’s government must also examine whether driving bans are needed to bring down NO2 levels on a further 15 kilometres of road in 117 different sections — a tiny fraction of Berlin’s total 5,343 kilometres of streets.

Authoritie­s must produce a new version of their clean air plan implementi­ng the court order by March 31.

After that, “driving bans must be implemente­d within two to three months,” the judges said.

But they allowed officials the option to appeal the decision to a higher Berlin court.

Port city Hamburg has already closed stretches of two major roads to older diesels, while Porsche and Mercedes-benz base Stuttgart will ban them from much of its territory from next year.

Judges also recently ordered a ban in the city centre of Frankfurt, Germany’s financial hub that sees an influx of tens of thousands of commuters each day.

A renewed focus on air quality in the wake of Volkswagen’s 2015 “dieselgate” scandal has seen a wave of courtroom action across Germany

 ?? — Reuters ?? Juergen Resch (R), head of the German environmen­tal help group (Deutsche Umwelthilf­e) uses his mobile phone before a court hearing on case seeking diesel cars ban in Berlin on Tuesday. The signs read ‘Applies to diesel.’
— Reuters Juergen Resch (R), head of the German environmen­tal help group (Deutsche Umwelthilf­e) uses his mobile phone before a court hearing on case seeking diesel cars ban in Berlin on Tuesday. The signs read ‘Applies to diesel.’

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