The Manila Times

Daimler struggling with EU emissions standards

- AFP

DETROIT: The chief executive of Daimler said Monday at the Detroit auto show that his company cannot currently guarantee it can meet tougher European CO2 emissions standards taking effect in several years.

Dieter Zetsche, CEO of the maker of Mercedes-Benz luxury vehicles, told reporters he “can’t guarantee” to meet tightening emission standards in 2021.

“It’s a huge challenge for everyone,” he told AFP later in an interview. “We will make it. That’s our intention. But I can’t guarantee it.”

A regulation adopted in 2014 requires vehicle manufactur­ers selling vehicles in the European Union to reach, with some exceptions, a level of 95 grams of CO2 emitted per kilometer by early 2021, compared to 130 grams in 2015.

Manufactur­ers that fail will be excess CO2. This could potentiall­y - dreds of millions of euros.

Fellow automotive CEO Sergio Marchionne of Fiat Chrysler said he understood Daimler’s predicamen­t, and his company was also looking at how to meet the tougher standards—with non-compliance not an option.

“We’ve gone through this. It ain’t pretty,” he said, regarding the cost

“Having said this, we have no intention of pulling vehicles, because we think we can meet the standards.”

German manufactur­ers, whose large engines emit more CO2 than smaller models, are struggling to achieve the goals, according to experts.

So far, they have relied on diesel to reduce emissions. But diesel engine cars have fallen out of favor with consumers and sales have dropped, exacerbate­d by the Volkswagen diesel emissions cheating scandal.

“It’s dragged all of us into the very uncomforta­ble state where we are now on the defensive continuous­ly about the utilizatio­n of diesel in the market,” Marchionne said.

To help comply with the new standards, manufactur­ers are developing a range of electric vehicles, with no certainty about the real- world demand from consumers.

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