19/12/07 Greenpeace – Commission car emissions proposal fails climate challenge (en)

Commission car emissions proposal fails climate challenge

Brussels, 19 December 2007 – In a long-awaited proposal, presented today, for curbing global warming pollution from new cars, the European Commission has relegated climate change to the back seat and granted major concessions to the car industry, said Greenpeace.

"Last week, in Bali, the European Union stood up like a lion for the world’s climate – this week the Union’s executive arm is going down like a lamb and putting car makers’ short-term profits before our common survival," said Franziska Achterberg, Greenpeace’s EU transport policy campaigner.

The Commission’s proposal for a new EU law endorses a short-term target for new cars in 2012 to pump out, on average, no more than 130 grams of carbon dioxide (CO2) per kilometer driven. This is a weakening of the EU’s original target of 120g CO2/km and the proposal fails to put forward any further reductions beyond that date. The proposal also sets out feeble penalties for offending car makers which in Greenpeace’s view are unlikely to deter car companies from violating the emission standard. In addition, the full level of penalties will only be reached in 2015, which effectively postpones the implementation of the law by three years. (1)

"Car manufacturers are in the driver’s seat at the European Commission," stated Achterberg. "The Commission has let car makers drive away with a proposal that sets a weak, short-term standard, lacks any longer-term targets, and offers an open road to heavy, gas-guzzling vehicles."

The Commission believes that emission requirements for new cars should be based on a car’s weight. This would discourage car makers from cutting down on vehicle weight as a means to achieve CO2 emission standards. An increase in the weight of cars is a major reason why car makers failed to achieve the emission cuts they promised in an earlier voluntary agreement. (2) (3)

Greenpeace urges the European Parliament and EU Environment Ministers to resist pressure from the auto industry and strengthen the proposed regulation by:

– restoring the 120g CO2/km standard as a fleet average by 2012, and setting a longer-term target of 80g CO2/km for the average of new cars by 2020;

– using a car’s size and not its weight as the basis for CO2 standards; (4)

– setting effective penalties to ensure car manufacturers respect the new emission standards from the start. Greenpeace proposes that this should be €150 for each gram of carbon dioxide above the legal limit, for each vehicle sold.

"Is the Commission up to the climate challenge?" asked Achterberg. "EU leaders want ambitious cuts in emissions by 2020, yet the Commission has come up with a pathetic legislative proposal that fails to demand any significant changes from the road transport sector, whose carbon dioxide emissions are continuing to rise," she said.

Contact Information
Franziska Achterberg, Greenpeace EU transport policy campaigner. Tel: +32 2 274 1918, Mobile: +32 498 362403

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