The German transport minister has threatened to block a core part of the EU’s green agenda, warning that Berlin will not support plans to ban new cars with combustion engines from 2035 unless Brussels exempts vehicles running on synthetic fuels.
Volker Wissing said engines that use «climate friendly» e-fuels, such as e-methane and e-kerosene, «must be allowed on a permanent basis».
The declaration comes days ahead of an EU vote on plans to force European carmakers to cut their models’ carbon emissions by 55 per cent between 2021 and 2030 and by 100 per cent in 2035.
The EU plan, provisionally agreed by member states last year, in effect makes it impossible to sell new petrol or diesel vehicles from 2035. That has been highly provocative in Germany, where hundreds of thousands of jobs could be affected by a ban on vehicles with combustion engines, which contain many more components and take more labour to construct, than electric vehicles.
Frans Timmermans, the EU’s Green Deal commissioner, has been sceptical of the environmental benefits of e-fuels, leading to concerns in Berlin that the commission will not allow for them when it reviews the legislation in 2025.
The text supposed to be confirmed next week «hadn’t changed».
Germany agreed to the phaseout on condition that Brussels launched a review into whether cars that run on e-fuels could be permitted after 2035.
E-fuels are produced using electricity from renewable hydrogen and other gases, so are often considered «carbon neutral». They are not widely available and require vast amounts of renewable energy to produce. Campaigners say they can be almost as noxious as burning fossil fuels and emit as many nitrogen oxides as a petrol-powered engine.
We need to test things out and see if indeed these new cars are as efficient and carbon neutral as some think. They could be or things could be much more complicated.
ReplyDeleteWe clearly have to do something about the environmental crisis we are in but yes, we need to go in the correct direction, not do something even worse. How many resources does it take to create such a car and how much does it consume afterwards?
DeleteThe EU wants certain things but in their hurry for change they might actually do a lot of harm to both people and the environment. Until we know with certainty that e-fuels are the way forward 100% we shouldn't force things.
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