Cape Argus

EU prepares to send petrol cars to the scrap heap

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THE European Commission wants to end the sale of new petrol and diesel cars by 2035, under a huge plan to fight climate change unveiled Wednesday.

According to one of a dozen ambitious climate draft laws revealed in Brussels, emissions from motor vehicles must fall by 55% by 2030 and drop to zero by 2035.

“As a result, all new cars registered as of 2035 will be zero-emission,” the statement announcing the plan said.

This would in practice mean that all cars and light vans sold from that date would be battery-powered electric cars, which currently represent less than a tenth of new registrati­ons in the EU.

But the move will be fiercely opposed by some in the industry lobby as it makes its way through an intense negotiatin­g and drafting process and scrutiny in the European parliament.

And there is caution among member states like France, Germany, Spain and Italy which have a large sectors manufactur­ing traditiona­l combustion engine vehicles and hybrids and supporting thousands of jobs.

Politician­s fear that motorists will see fuel prices rising as a result off carbon levies as they are pushed to sell their gas-guzzlers and buy new electric cars.

The recent “yellow vest” protests in France have given European government­s a chilling example of the kind of populist fury that environmen­tal controls on motoring can provoke.

But European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen insisted the transition was vital if Europe is to meet emissions reduction targets and that the public was rallying behind it.

“About a dozen of the large automotive companies both in Germany and elsewhere in Europe have announced that they are going to switch their fleet to exclusivel­y emission free vehicles,” she noted. We see that people want these developmen­ts, there’s been a huge increase in the number of signing up for electric vehicles,” she said, arguing that the US market has tripled over the past year.

Motorised road transport is Europeans’ most common way of getting about, but it represents 15% of the bloc’s greenhouse emissions and Brussels aims to be carbon-neutral by 2050.

Economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic has hit the road vehicle market hard, but electric cars have been an exception, with growth accelerati­ng.

Battery-powered cars represente­d eight percent of new registrati­ons in western Europe in the first five months of this year, with 356 000 new vehicles, more than in all of 2019.

The impending new regulation­s will increase this trend, as they will not only spell doom for classic petrol and diesel motors but effectivel­y force out hybrid and hybrid-rechargeab­le models.

These had once been seen as a transition­al technology, a key product for an industry that boasts of employing 14.6 million workers in Europe.

Volkswagen plans to stop selling vehicle with internal combustion engines between 2033 and 2035.

 ??  ?? FUMES from a car exhaust pipe
FUMES from a car exhaust pipe

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