EU dodges deadline for polluting trucks setting back climate goals
Polluting trucks could continue to be sold in Europe after 2040, according to a?new EU plan ?which campaigners say would make the bloc’s net-zero climate goal impossible. Green group Transport & Environment (T&E ) said the proposed 90 per cent CO2 reduction target for truckmakers virtually ensures that diesel freight trucks would still be on the road 10 years later, in 2050. It urged MEPs and governments to instead set a 2035 zero-emissions deadline.
Fedor Unterlohner, T&E freight manager, said: “The failure to set a deadline for polluting trucks is a craven concession to truck manufacturers. By 2035 virtually all new?electric ?lorries will be cheaper to run than diesels while driving as far and carrying as much. Without a clear EU deadline, diesel trucks will pollute our lungs and the planet for years longer than necessary.”
Truckmakers would have to reduce the average CO2 emissions of its new vehicles by only 45 per cent in 2030 (compared to 2019/2020 levels), under the proposal. The EU’s 2030 target lags behind truck manufacturers’ own plans. T&E said lawmakers should mandate a 65 per cent cut in 2030, which is equivalent to the zero-emissions sales goals already announced by?Daimler Truck ?and?Volvo Trucks .
Daimler Truck has announced that up to 60 per cent of its sales will be zero emissions vehicles in 2030 while Volvo Trucks has pledged 70 per cent by the end of the decade. This translates to at least a minus 65 per cent CO2 target when considering modest fuel efficiency improvements. This is what other truckmakers should be aiming for.
Daimler Truck and Volvo Trucks have also partnered with TRATON GROUP to?install a high-performance public electric vehicle?charging network across Europe ?to help clean the logistics industry.?
The EU would mandate that all new city buses be zero emissions by 2030, under the Commission’s proposal. T&E welcomed the extension of climate targets to this sector but said that an earlier deadline of 2027 was needed to ensure vehicle-makers keep up with the demand from cities for clean buses. In line with trucks, new coaches will need to reduce emissions by 90 per cent in 2040.
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Unterlohner added: “Ambitious EU climate rules are driving the electrification of cars and are badly needed for trucks. Without more stringent targets from 2030, there will be a glut of polluting diesel lorries still on our roads for decades to come.
“Europe also risks denying investment certainty to battery production and metals processing, driving companies into the arms of the Inflation Reduction Act.”
Trucks powered by batteries, hydrogen fuel cells and hydrogen combustion – where existing engine technology is used – would count as zero-emissions under the EU plan. The climate rules would apply to all heavy-duty vehicles except some special types such as construction trucks, ambulances or fire trucks. These exempt vehicles account for about 10 per cent of heavy-duty vehicles sold in Europe.
The European Parliament and EU governments will debate the proposal before agreeing on the final law later this year. Trucks account for just two per cent of the vehicles on the road but are responsible for almost 30 per cent of EU road transport CO2 emissions.?
Road transport and heavy-duty vehicles are also one of the largest sources of particulate matter (PM) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) pollution, which cause an estimated 350,000 premature deaths per year in the EU.
Low carbon energy strategist for Net Zero 2050
1 年A win for the oil cartels, no doubt
Independent Consultant
1 年Displacing ~51 billion tons of GHGs & fossil carbon is a task for many decades & until all energies used to extract and process critical materials necessary to create critical products come from renewable conversions & sustainable sources, modern civilisation will remain fundamentally dependent on fossil fuels used in the production of these indispensable materials & end products. The UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2022 states that there is "no credible pathway to 1.5°C in place" and "current pledges for action by 2030, if delivered in full, would still mean a rise in global heating of about 2.5°C and catastrophic extreme weather worldwide." Rarely is there a bigger opportunity for growth & development than during an energy transition. Government(s) therefore need resolve, joined up thinking to focus on technologies, policies & market structures that enable & accelerate the next energy transition. Furthermore, they could also commit at scale & together with multilateral banks better tap into private capital. Public sector financial strength should also be applied to lengthen investment horizons. Otherwise short term thinking will only achieve short term results.