EU agrees to cut emissions from new cars by 37 percent by 2030

Posted: December 18, 2018 by oldbrew in Emissions, government, News, Travel
Tags: ,

BMW HQ in Munich, Germany


It looks like the EU is aiming to limit the supply of non-electric vehicles in order to reach an arbitrary ‘climate target’. What, if anything, this might mean for imports is not clear but their own manufacturers are not happy, for obvious reasons.

European Union members and the European Parliament on Monday agreed to slash carbon dioxide emissions from new cars by 37.5 percent by 2030, the European Commission announced.

The announcement comes two days after the end of the COP24 summit in Poland where one of the largest disappointments for countries of all wealths and sizes was the lack of ambition to reduce emissions shown in the final text, says Phys.org.

Emissions from new vans will have to be 31 percent lower than in 2021, according to Monday’s agreement.

“With this legislation in place, we are setting the right targets and incentives to tackle emissions from the transport sector,” said Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy Miguel Arias Canete.

“It will help our industry to embrace innovation towards zero-emission mobility and further strengthen its global leadership in clean vehicles.”

The deal is a compromise between the demands of states like Germany which wanted a cut of 30 percent and the European Parliament which had wanted a reduction of 40 percent.

Continued here.

Comments
  1. A C Osborn says:

    How?
    The EU does not do sod all as far as Science, Engineering and Manufacture is concerned.
    So they are going to stop the sale of FF vehicles, I can see the Manufacturers leaving for the USA in droves.
    If they think that Evs will cut it and their rocking Electricity Grids will cope they are completely delusional, but then we already know that.

  2. oldbrew says:

    EU car makers know they can’t sell EVs in large numbers if the demand isn’t there.
    Can politicians do their sales pitch for them? Or force the issue somehow :/

  3. spetzer86 says:

    Just sell the cars with no motors and problem solved! Or, I suppose, there’s always alternative bio energy: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QWo1LKtcew

  4. ivan says:

    With those reductions it means the electric vehicles would be borderline when they took into account the CO2 produced when generating the electricity for charging, but that is never considered by the the church of climatology fools..

  5. cognog2 says:

    Another good reason for Brexit and ASAP. Come on world trade here we come.

  6. ivan says:

    Thinking about it they could always go back to something like the Stanley Steam car after all it held the speed record for quite some time. Using a modern natural gas fired flash boiler you get almost instant start and steam as exhaust – should keep the greens happy

  7. hunter says:

    End the COP parasitic culture, end the climate consensus mythology.
    Cancel all future COP conferences.

  8. Gamecock says:

    ‘EU agrees to cut emissions from new cars by 37 percent by 2030’

    Which will result in a 37 percent reduction in EU membership by 2030.

  9. John PAK says:

    A typical diesel truck can reduce fuel consumption by retro-fitting a good hydrogen unit. Most get 20% and some well tuned ones report over 30%. This has been around for decades but is not popular with oil companies or Governments that tax fuel.
    These EU dictats are political manoeuvres rather than genuine attempts at making vehicle fuel efficient.
    If we were genuinely wanting to reduce CO2 emission or particulate pollution we’d tax ships’ kerosene and Av gas which are burned in vast volumes each and every day and Australia would stop exporting coal and LNG to China.

  10. oldbrew says:

    Being unrealistic is what climate obsession is all about…

    German carmakers have decried the EU agreement on 2030 car fleet emission targets as unrealistic. “The regulation demands too much while promoting too little,” the German Association of the Automotive Industry (VDA) said in a statement. “Nobody knows today how the agreed limits can be achieved in the time given,” the VDA added. The association warned that the move would damage Europe’s standing in the international car market and endanger jobs.

    https://www.cleanenergywire.org/news/german-car-industry-decries-eu-agreement-2030-car-fleet-emission-limits

  11. BLACK PEARL says:

    I seen to remember Freddy Flintstone had the perfect EU vehicle

  12. oldbrew says:

    From the EU Brexit no-deal plan…

    EU climate policy

    The Commission has today adopted the following acts in the area of EU climate legislation in order to ensure that a “no-deal” scenario does not affect the smooth functioning and the environmental integrity of the Emissions Trading System.

    — A Commission Decision to suspend temporarily for the UK the free allocation of emissions allowances, auctioning, and the exchange of international credits with effect from 1 January 2019.

    — An Implementing Decision to allow an appropriate annual quota allocation to UK companies for accessing the EU27 market (until 31 December 2020).

    — An Implementing Regulation to ensure that the reporting by companies differentiates between the EU market and the UK market to allow a correct allocation of quotas in the future.

    http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-18-6851_en.htm
    – – –
    Whatever that all means 😐

  13. oldbrew says:

    “Whose fault is the CO2 insanity of the EU?” – Bild Zeitung

    Stricter EU CO2 limits for cars “threaten the German car industry with a total loss that nobody can repair”, Tom Drechsler writes in Germany’s largest tabloid Bild Zeitung. The article blames Austria, which currently holds the EU presidency and does not have a car industry of its own, as well as countries like Malta, Ireland and Luxembourg, which had pushed for even higher CO2 limits. Further blame is attributed to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who didn’t fight the 37.5 percent limit, the “ignorance of the people” who didn’t realise that “only about 25 percent of European CO2 emissions are caused by traffic” and the German car industry, which has “put itself (dieselgate) on the sidelines and missed the boat on hybrid technology and e-mobility”. VW head Herbert Diess told the paper that the company would “obviously be able to reach the new EU target” but warned that mobility would become more expensive and that job cuts were looming in the car industry.

    https://www.cleanenergywire.org/news/whose-fault-co2-insanity-eu-bild-zeitung

    Germany is the only country in Europe without a speed limit on highways. Source: Freeway_speed_limits_europe.png/wikipedia