Auto Express

KILLED BY CO2 What future is there for the city car?

● Hard to get emissions lower ● EV power may be a lifeline

- Steve Fowler Steve_Fowler@dennis.co.uk @stevefowle­r

“Putting the price up makes a city car sustainabl­e, but then the younger generation cannot afford to buy it “CARLOS TAVARES PSA Group CEO “We have decided to move out of the A-segment because such combustion engines will be extremely difficult to make profitable” NAME LUCA DE MEO SEAT CEO

POPULAR small, affordable city cars such as the Peugeot 108 and SEAT Mii could disappear from showrooms in coming years, according to many of the bosses of Europe’s biggest car makers.

Speaking to Auto Express at last month’s Frankfurt motor show, bosses explained how CO2 regulation­s will mean a whole generation of popular small cars could die – pushing the entry price of a new car up in the process and making it more difficult for many new drivers to get a foothold into car ownership.

With the EU demanding that every car maker hits a target of 95g/km of CO2 as an average for all the cars it sells from 2020, or risk punitive fines, the work required to reduce emissions from the smallest cars makes many unviable.

PSA boss Carlos Tavares explained: “If you see the way that the CO2 regulation­s are set, the smaller the car the more demanding the regulation is,” he said. “This means that when you make a small car you will have to meet the CO2 objective and it will be tougher than if you make a big car.

“All the A-segment cars will disappear because there are no profits – it’s not sustainabl­e. Putting the price up makes it sustainabl­e, but then the younger generation­s cannot afford it.”

That view was backed up by SEAT CEO Luca de Meo. “It’s absurd,” he told us. “It’s easier to lower emissions on a big sedan from 96 to 85 [g/km of CO2] than on a small car – you’d have to use hybrid, but the price goes up.”

He went on: “We have decided to move out of the A-segment, because such combustion engines will be very difficult to make profitable.”

Some popular cars will disappear from showrooms, sooner than you might think, as Vauxhall MD Stephen Norman revealed. “We’ll have nothing below Corsa post-January,” he told us. “Adam and Viva are running out – and the runout of Viva is one of the easiest things we’ve done, by the way!”

Sadly, the prices of superminis are unlikely to drop to pick up eager citycar buyers. Norman said: “There’s just no room for Corsa to move down [on price] due to the level of profitabil­ity that we’d be left with.”

Renault sees some life left in its Twingo, but not for long, as CEO Thierry Bolloré explained: “We continue with Twingo. The A-segment is not the segment that is getting developed the most – that’s a fact.”

However, while many car makers were predicting the death of the city car, Hyundai was using Frankfurt to launch its latest i10. Its future seems secure, as Hyundai’s UK MD Ashley Andrew told us. “The i10 is fundamenta­l to our business. It’s one of our main volume pillars and has been incredibly successful,” he said.

However, while the current i10 costs from just over £9,200, the new model’s entry price is likely to jump up by around £2,000.

There is some hope for city cars, though, as Luca de Meo revealed. “I think there will be a blackout for a while,” he said. “At least until the cost of batteries comes down so that a small electric car with 100km range will be cheaper than a combustion engine. Battery cost is the thing.”

Skoda CEO Bernhard Maier also hopes there will be a future for cars such as the Skoda Citigo. “We can’t be without that segment – it provides an entry into the world of Skoda,” he told us.

“We’re now offering a purely electric version and we hopefully can decide in due time that we are also prolonging the combustion-engined version of the Citigo.”

“We’ll have nothing below the Corsa after January, but unfortunat­ely there’s no room for the Corsa to move down on price because of profitabil­ity. ” STEPHEN NORMAN Vauxhall MD

 ??  ?? IN DANGER It’s much more difficult to lower the emissions
of small cars such as these STYLE TREK has a tough look and raised suspension, plus plenty of extra kit
IN DANGER It’s much more difficult to lower the emissions of small cars such as these STYLE TREK has a tough look and raised suspension, plus plenty of extra kit
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