EU governments delay (again) green tolling system for trucks
Three years after first being asked, EU governments have again delayed a greener road tolling system for trucks that would promote more fuel efficient and zero-emissions lorries. National officials today failed to reach a position on reform of the Eurovignette law to charge new trucks based on their CO2 emissions.
Interested in this kind of news?
Receive them directly in your inbox. Delivered once a week.
Currently a country cannot base road tolls on a truck’s CO2 emissions. The European Commission proposed differentiated charges to encourage cleaner, more efficient heavy-goods vehicles in June 2017. A year later, the European Parliament also decided its position, making the European Commission proposal even more environmentally friendly. But while EU governments have debated important improvements to the proposal, they have still not reached a common position that would allow negotiations with the Parliament to begin.
James Nix, freight manager at T&E, said: “It delays yet again the start of the Green Deal for trucking. Governments missed the chance to increase investment certainty for truckmakers investing in fuel efficiency and zero-emissions technologies, and for hauliers buying cleaner trucks. It’s a setback for climate action in trucking that must be put right in September. Germany, which is Europe’s largest truck market, has a great responsibility to drive this forward under its EU presidency.”
Governments will only discuss greener truck tolls again when transport ministers meet in September. Already they have discussed improvements to the proposal including allowing toll exemptions for zero emission trucks – electric and hydrogen – until 2026. They were also close to agreeing a very progressive system of CO2-based charging that fairly matches the reduced toll to the cut in CO2 achieved by the new truck or large van.
Related Articles
View All
Joint letter: EU must reach agreement on zero-emission heavy-duty proposal
Failure to secure an agreement on Weights and Dimensions file would create uncertainty for operators investing in zero-emission heavy-duty vehicles.
Truckmaking giants favour shareholder payouts over investing into the zero-emission transition
In the lead-up to the first-ever EU truck CO2 target in 2025, major truckmakers have come to increasingly prioritise their shareholders over making th...
Joint letter: industry calls for toll exemptions for zero-emission trucks
Leading EU businesses call EU Transport Ministers to implement toll exemptions to accelerate clean freight