The Denver Post

Court lets cities ban diesel vehicles

Idea could spread to other locales battling air pollution

- By Frank Jordans and David Rising

BERLIN» Handing environmen­talists a landmark victory, a German court ruled Tuesday that cities can ban diesel cars and trucks to combat air pollution, a decision with far-reaching and costly implicatio­ns in the country where the diesel engine was invented in the 1890s.

The ruling by the Federal Administra­tive Court stirred fears from motorists, auto dealers and other businesses worried about the financial impact. And Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government scrambled to reassure drivers it would seek to prevent such drastic measures by pushing other ways to reduce urban pollution.

Diesel automobile­s are a popular alternativ­e to gasoline-powered ones in Germany, with about 9 million diesel cars and several million trucks, buses and other vehicles affected by the ruling.

Overall, 1 in 3 passenger cars in Germany, home to such automakers as Daimler, Volkswagen and BMW, are diesel-powered, though the cleanest, most modern models would probably still be allowed even if cities decided on a ban.

“It’s a great day for clean air in Germany,” said Juergen Resch, head of the group Environmen­tal Action Germany, which had sued dozens of German cities for failing to meet legally binding emissions limits.

While diesel cars produce less carbon dioxide and tend to get better mileage than gas-powered vehicles, they emit higher levels of nitrogen oxides, or NOx, contributi­ng to respirator­y illnesses and 6,000 deaths annually, according to government figures.

Two German states had appealed lower court decisions that suggested bans on particular­ly dirty diesel cars would be effective. Germany’s highest administra­tive court rejected that appeal Tuesday, effectivel­y instructin­g two cities at the center of the case — Stuttgart and Duesseldor­f — to consider bans as part of their clean air plans.

What comes next is an open question.

It’s not clear whether cities will actually move to ban diesels. And if they do so, it remains to be seen whether automakers will be forced to upgrade exhaust and software systems or buy back vehicles; if the government will offer consumers incentives; or if owners will be left on their own, forced to bear the costs.

The Leipzig-based administra­tive court said cities won’t be required to compensate drivers for being unable to use their diesel cars.

Speaking on behalf of automakers, Matthias Wissmann, president of the German Associatio­n of the Au- tomotive Industry, stressed that the government could ease the uncertaint­y by not leaving it to cities to decide on a case-by-case basis.

“We hope it comes to sensible national regulation­s,” he said.

European cities considerin­g diesel bans like Copenhagen and Paris will be watching how the situation plays out in Germany as they make their own decisions.

Jeff Schuster, an analyst with the consulting firm LMC Automotive near Detroit, said diesel bans could spread to other polluted European cities. But he said the market in Europe, China and elsewhere was already headed in that direction because of the big push toward electric vehicles and the damage done by the Volkswagen diesel-emissions cheating scandal.

Diesels make up a smaller part of the American auto market, and so any bans in Europe would have little effect on the U.S., Schuster said. For the past two years in the U.S., only 2.7 percent of registered vehicles were diesel, according to Kelley Blue Book.

 ?? Jens Meyer, The Associated Press ?? An environmen­tal activist stands in front of the Federal Administra­tive Court prior to a ruling in Leipzig, Germany, on Tuesday. The words on the person’s mask read, “Diesel emissions kill.”
Jens Meyer, The Associated Press An environmen­tal activist stands in front of the Federal Administra­tive Court prior to a ruling in Leipzig, Germany, on Tuesday. The words on the person’s mask read, “Diesel emissions kill.”

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