The National - News

German court’s deadly blow to diesel cars puts Angela Merkel on uncertain road

- LEONID BERSHIDSKY

Atop German court in Leipzig ruled last Tuesday that cities have the right to ban diesel cars.

Although the incoming coalition government has vowed to avoid such bans, the ruling is a deadly blow for diesel engines in Germany, an event on a par with the country’s 2011 decision to phase out nuclear power plants. From now on, buying a diesel car is an act of unnecessar­y courage.

The Federal Administra­tive Court affirmed the legality of bans imposed by courts in Duesseldor­f in 2016 and Stuttgart in 2017. These cities, prodded by an environmen­talist group, Deutsche Umwelthilf­e, wanted the right to keep out older diesel cars because of higher-than-normal pollution levels. State authoritie­s appealed the bans, but Tuesday’s decision ended that legal avenue.

In practical terms, this means only the newest diesel cars, conforming to the Euro 6 standard, are safe from bans that could be imposed anywhere – and especially where pollution is consistent­ly high. Unsurprisi­ngly, Germany’s most populous areas are on this list. Locations in Berlin, Gelsenkirc­hen, Leipzig, Munich, Nuremberg, Dortmund and Hamburg are among those where fine particle pollution regularly exceeds the norm. All big German cities now overshoot the European nitrogen oxide limit, with Munich, Stuttgart and Cologne the worst.

Not even the owners of Euro 6-compliant diesels can rest easy: norms can change, and environmen­tal groups can get hungry for more successes.

The coalition agreement on the formation of the next German government specifical­ly says – twice – that diesel bans are to be avoided and that cleaner air can be achieved by other means, such as increasing the share of electric cars and using them for government service. In typical style, Chancellor Angela Merkel sought to calm the public after the Leipzig ruling, saying that no universal Germany-wide ban was coming and that the federal government would talk to states and cities with high pollution about trying other measures.

However famed Mrs Merkel’s negotiatin­g talent, it is not something on which to hang a major decision like a car purchase.

There is not even a universall­y recognised programme for clearly marking vehicles that comply with the modern standard.

According to DAT Group, which collects data on the German car market, 23 per cent of those who bought a new car and 15 per cent of used car buyers in 2017 said the discussion­s around diesel influenced their purchase decision; almost one in five of these buyers were in the market because they got rid of their diesel vehicles.

That was probably a wise move: diesel residual values – the value after depreciati­on – dropped significan­tly last year while petrol-powered cars gained.

That is a major headache, not just for car owners but also for the German car industry. Diesel cars made up 45.8 per cent of new registrati­ons in Germany in 2016, the latest year for which data are available from the European Automobile Manufactur­ing Associatio­n. That’s not as high as Ireland’s 70 per cent, yet high enough to make quick retooling expensive – not to mention the potential for angry car owners’ demands that manufactur­ers retrofit their cars to comply with pollution regulation­s.

There’s already political pressure on them to bear any potential costs of such retrofits.

Dealers have a problem of their own. Today, according to DAT, it takes 102 days to sell a used diesel car, compared with 89 days for a petrol one.

A wave of driving bans could be an existentia­l threat to the business, given how many old diesel cars are out there.

And then there is the logistics and delivery business. A lot of it depends on diesel lorries in Germany, and if city centres close to those lorries, there could be lengthy disruption­s. Businesses are already up in arms, as the smaller ones cannot afford to replace their vehicles.

Mrs Merkel has made abrupt decisions with far-reaching consequenc­es, such as the nuclear phaseout after the Fukushima disaster or the open-door policy for refugees in 2015. The diesel decision is a similar scary leap into the unknown, only it’s been made without Mrs Merkel and against her will.

It’ll be a mammoth job to make sure the diesel phaseout, which is all but inevitable today, is gradual and as painless as possible for everyone involved.

However famed Mrs Merkel’s negotiatin­g talent, it is not something on which to hang a major decision like a car purchase

 ?? AFP ?? An environmen­tal activist demonstrat­es in front of the Federal Administra­tive Court in Leipzig
AFP An environmen­tal activist demonstrat­es in front of the Federal Administra­tive Court in Leipzig

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