Marin Independent Journal

Germany, EU resolve dispute on combustion engines

- By Kirsten Grieshaber

>> Germany and the European Union announced Saturday that they have reached an agreement in their dispute over the future of cars with combustion engines, allowing the registrati­on of new vehicles with such engines even after 2035 provided they use climate-neutral fuel only.

EU Commission VicePresid­ent Frans Timmermans tweeted that “we have found an agreement with Germany on the future use of e-fuels in cars.”

German Transport Minister Volker Wissing tweeted that the way had been cleared for vehicles with internal combustion engines that only use climate-neutral fuels to be newly registered even after 2035.

“We secure opportunit­ies for Europe by preserving important options for climate-neutral and affordable mobility,” Wissing wrote.

An initial proposal by European Union member countries on new carbon dioxide emission standards for cars had been postponed amid opposition from Germany. The EU had wanted to ban the sale of all new cars with combustion engines from 2035.

Germany had demanded an exemption for cars that burn e-fuels, arguing that they are carbon neutral when produced using renewable energy and carbon captured from the air so they wouldn't spew further climate-changing emissions into the atmosphere.

Wissing said they had agreed on concrete procedural steps and that a specific timetable has been made binding. “We want the process to be completed by fall 2024,” he added.

Timmermans also wrote that “we will work now on getting the CO2-standards for cars regulation adopted as soon as possible.”

The issue has driven an ideologica­l wedge within the German government between Wissing's libertaria­n Free Democratic Party, or FDP, and the environmen­talist Green party, which had backed a complete ban on combustion engines.

Germany's main opposition party, the center-right Union bloc, also opposed an EU-wide ban on combustion engine vehicles, warning that it would harm the country's prized auto industry.

Critics say battery-electric technology is a better fit for passenger cars and precious synthetic fuels should be used only where no other option is feasible, such as in aviation.

The environmen­tal group Greenpeace criticized the agreement sharply.

“This lazy compromise undermines climate protection in transport, and it harms Europe,” the group wrote in a statement.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz “let the FDP get away with its reckless blackmaili­ng of the EU for far too long,” Greenpeace said. “The result is a step backwards for the climate and a disservice to the European auto industry.”

In contrast, the transport policy spokesman for the FDP in the European Parliament, Jan-Christoph Oetjen, called the agreement a great success, German news agency dpa reported.

“The nonsensica­l blanket ban on the internal combustion engine is thus off the table,” he said.

“We are keeping a cutting-edge technology and important jobs on the continent,” Oetjen added.

Germany's Environmen­t Minister Steffi Lemke, a member of the Greens, said it was good that an agreement had been reached. A further impasse would have severely damaged both confidence in the European Union's procedures and Germany's reliabilit­y in terms of European policy, she said, according to dpa.

Lemke added that it was important that the automotive industry now has clarity regarding the switch to electromob­ility.

 ?? MICHAEL PROBST — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Cars give off exhaust fumes as children head to school in Frankfurt, Germany, on Feb. 27.
MICHAEL PROBST — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Cars give off exhaust fumes as children head to school in Frankfurt, Germany, on Feb. 27.

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