Austin American-Statesman

German court defers ruling on banning diesel cars in cities

Ban would have big impact on country’s auto industry.

- By Frank Jordans

A German court has deferred a decision on whether to allow a ban on diesel cars in cities to lower air pollution, a move that could have drastic consequenc­es for the country’s powerful auto industry.

The Federal Administra­tive Court in Leipzig began hearing the case Thursday and had been expected to issue a verdict within hours.

But judges said the process had taken longer than expected and set a date of Feb. 27 for a ruling.

The court is hearing an appeal by two German states against lower court rulings that suggested driving bans for particular­ly dirty diesel cars would be effective and should be seriously considered as a means of protecting public health.

If judges reject the appeal, dozens of cities would have a few months to enact measures to remove heavily polluting diesel vehicles from the roads — an administra­tive nightmare for local authoritie­s and a heavy blow to drivers who bought cars they were promised met emissions standards.

The original court cases were brought by the group Environmen­tal Action Germany, which accuses the government of putting automakers’ interests before people’s health.

Juergen Resch, who heads the environmen­tal group, said he was optimistic the court would find in its favor.

German car manufactur­er Volkswagen was found three years ago to have used in-car software to cheat on U.S. diesel emissions tests. The discovery resulted in large fines and costly buybacks for Volkswagen in the United States, but the German government has refrained from punishing the company, a major employer that’s partly owned by the state of Lower Saxony.

On Thursday, prosecutor­s investigat­ing alleged diesel emissions cheating at Audi — a VW subsidiary — searched several premises including two associated with former members of the company’s board.

Apart from hitting Volkswagen and other German carmakers, officials warn that a ban could paralyze bus companies, garbage collection services and tradespeop­le who rely heavily on diesel vehicles.

The European Union is also putting pressure on Germany and other countries for failing to rein in air pollution.

In a bid to avoid punitive action by the EU, German officials recently proposed a series of steps to reduce harmful emissions, including making public transport free on days when air pollution is particular­ly bad, and requiring taxis and car-sharing companies to use electric vehicles.

Automakers are particular­ly worried about another government proposal: forcing them to physically upgrade millions of vehicles that don’t conform to emissions limits.

Resch, the environmen­tal campaigner, said the car industry’s arguments against hardware upgrades would likely vanish if the only other option is to banish diesel vehicles from the roads.

“If driving bans are confirmed we’ll see technical solutions within a few days to prevent driving bans for as many people as possible,” he said.

 ?? SEBASTIAN GOLLNOW / DPA VIA AP ?? Greenpeace demonstrat­ors in bodysuits protest pollution caused by vehicle emissions while police guard the road in Stuttgart, Germany, earlier this week. A poster (front, left) reads: Clean air is our right.
SEBASTIAN GOLLNOW / DPA VIA AP Greenpeace demonstrat­ors in bodysuits protest pollution caused by vehicle emissions while police guard the road in Stuttgart, Germany, earlier this week. A poster (front, left) reads: Clean air is our right.

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