An analysis of new official EU data shows that progress on recalls of manipulated diesel cars is stalling in the European Union while the continent still faces an air quality crisis which has landed 14 EU Member States in court.
Even the cheapest and least effective form of diesel fixes – software updates – are making very slow progress in the EU and would take another two years to be completed at the current pace. They also cover only 10 out of 43 million grossly polluting diesels cars and vans on Europe’s roads, leaving the vast majority of dirty diesels unaddressed.
Progress is not only slow but also very unequal across Member States and manufacturers, with consumers from Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), in particular, being left behind: there only 55% of Volkswagen Group’s cars are updated compared to 83% in the West. Recall rates are particularly low for Opel Cascada and Zafira (12%) as well as for Audi’s A6 (30%). DUH’s latest report shows that, unlike in the US, much more effective hardware retrofits are currently not offered to European consumers.
Below, download our analysis and the European Commission’s data on recalls.
Lessons from EU funding in Central and Eastern European countries
Global competitors are bold in pursuing their industrial futures, and so should the EU.
A T&E note outlines why allowing fuels – synthetic or bio – in cars makes no environmental, economic, or industrial sense.