The Committee on Industry, Research and Energy (ITRE) of the European Parliament has fallen into line with virtually every demand of the car industry lobby in a vote on proposed fuel efficiency standards for new cars.
[mailchimp_signup][/mailchimp_signup]The Commission’s proposal foresees CO2 emissions of the average new car sold in Europe in 2012 of 130g CO2/km.
The industry committee voted, by a small majority for:
Kerstin Meyer of Transport & Environment (T&E) said: “The industry committee wants loopholes so wide you could drive a gas-guzzling SUV through them. If their proposals go unchecked by their colleagues in the environment committee, and EU environment ministers, the legislation will be almost completely meaningless.”
Results of an opinion poll conducted in five EU countries and published last week showed overwhelming support among citizens for measures to force carmakers to reduce the fuel consumption of the cars they produce by 25 per cent without delay.
The committee’s suggested weakening of the EU targets also follows publication of a T&E report last week that showed some carmakers are making great strides in improving fuel efficiency. BMW AG, reduced emissions of CO2 by 7.3% last year. Reductions in CO2 emissions are directly linked to improved fuel efficiency.
Meyer commented: “Even premium carmakers can make big cuts in CO2 with the threat of regulation looming. If the threat of meaningful targets is removed, camakers will simply revert to their century-old strategy of making cars ever heavier, more powerful and more polluting. It’s up to the environment committee, and environment ministers to maintain the pressure and keep high-tech fuel efficient innovation coming.”
The Parliament’s Committee on Environment, Public Health and Food Safety (ENVI), the lead committee on the issue, will vote on September 9th.
Environment ministers from the EU’s 27 member states will discuss the proposal in October.
After crying wolf on the 2025 EU target despite EV sales growing in Germany, the industry now wants to roll back the 2035 standard.
T&E's William Todts assesses the EU Commission chief's three biggest promises
Cutting regulation is a gift to China’s car makers
Europe’s carmakers have a unique competitive advantage over their Chinese counterparts - yet the Omnibus proposals risk throwing it away