The European Environment Agency (EEA) has attempted to explain why the EU’s current emissions testing system for new cars is giving readings that are very different from emissions in real-life driving.
Receive them directly in your inbox. Delivered once a week.
The EEA has published a report, Explaining road transport emissions: a non-technical guide, which gives a simplified explanation of the information on road emissions and the technology available to reduce them. It confirms that the EU’s testing procedure produces misleading emissions data and says there are three main reasons: a current testing system that is outdated, permitted flexibilities in the current testing regime that allow car makers to achieve artificially low emissions readings; and factors which cannot be taken into account in a laboratory test such as driver behaviour or certain weather.
It is the first time the EEA has acknowledged the gap by publishing both the official and ‘real-world’ CO2 figures. ‘The discrepancy between type approval and real-world CO2 emissions is about 40–45 %,’ it says.
The current EU testing procedure is due to be replaced in 2017 or 2018 by a more accurate testing system.
The Commission promised to work on creating demand. The upcoming fleets law is a golden opportunity to deliver on this.
Gutting the EU’s car CO2 rules would not just remove a key pillar of the European Green Deal, it would consign Europe’s carmakers to the car museum as...
German Chancellor will ask EU leaders for loophole to sell ‘extended range’ EVs, a technology that China already dominates.