World

EU lawmakers pass ban on new petrol, diesel cars by 2035

This is part of climate target in cutting CO2 emissions by over 50% this decade

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 09 Jun 2022 4:00PM

EU lawmakers pass ban on new petrol, diesel cars by 2035
Cars currently account for 12% of all CO2 emissions in the 27-member EU bloc, while transportation overall accounts for around a quarter. – Pixabay pic, June 9, 2022

STRASBOURG – In the face of strong conservative opposition, European Parliament lawmakers yesterday narrowly voted to back a European Commission proposal for a total ban on new carbon dioxide (CO2) emitting vehicles by 2035.

The commission last year unveiled plans to stop the sale of vehicles using internal combustion engines as part of an ambitious climate target to cut emissions by more than half over this decade and 90% by 2035.

The measure passed by 339 votes to 249 with 24 abstentions at a session in Strasbourg – in practice limiting future sales to emissions-free all-electric models.

Cars currently account for 12% of all CO2 emissions in the 27-member EU bloc, while transportation overall accounts for around a quarter.

The conservative European People’s Party (EPP), the Parliament’s biggest group of lawmakers, had sought to push a compromise that would have diluted the proposals and allowed sales of hybrid vehicles to continue.

Their amendment was narrowly defeated while an ambitious attempt by the Greens to bring the measure deadline forward to 2030 also failed.

Conservatives were also unable to push through amendments on having a car’s production-related carbon footprint taken into consideration as well – potentially allowing carmakers credits for synthetic, so-called e-fuels, made with captured CO2 and hydrogen produced from renewable sources.

After the vote, EU environmental committee chair Pascal Canfin triumphantly tweeted: “100% zero-emission cars in 2035! I strongly welcome the vote on CO2 standards in the @Europarl_EN. This position of the European Parliament is an important victory and consistent with our objective of climate neutrality.”

German Green EU legislator Michael Bloss also hailed the vote as a move that would simultaneously protect the climate and jobs in the sector.

French EPP lawmaker Agnes Evren was less impressed, however, with a decision she said would “condemn industrial activity and strongly penalise consumers”.

She said the legislation would prevent the commercialisation of high-performance hybrid vehicles or vehicles using biofuels, whose production she said could potentially prove less expensive and less polluting than electric vehicles. – AFP, June 9, 2022

Related News

Malaysia / 2w

Govt ‘sticking’ with petrol subsidies reduction this year, says Rafizi

Malaysia / 1mth

Eight million kg of timber debris a ‘sheer waste’ of natural resources, says activist

Business / 1mth

WTO rules against EU’s delegated act, deems it discriminatory towards M’sian palm oil biofuels

Malaysia / 2mth

NGOs alarmed at Kelantan’s plan to develop environmentally sensitive areas

Malaysia / 2mth

Malay man touched by help from Chinese ‘ah moi’ and Indian boy

Our Planet / 2mth

Wildlife destroyed: The overlooked ‘ecocide’ of the war in Ukraine

Spotlight

Malaysia

Penang mulls raising wages of civil servants

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Court upholds Siti Bainun's conviction, sentence for abusing girl with Down syndrome

Malaysia

After years of delay, Sarawak labour laws to be amended to match peninsula's

By Stephen Then

Malaysia

Papagomo charged with sedition, defaming king

Malaysia

Langkawi needs tourists, jobs, not LRT, says Mahfuz

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Sabah hospitality industry offers plenty of jobs but little stability

By Jason Santos

You may be interested

World

Singaporean sentenced to 34 years’ jail for killing daughter, abusing his kids

World

AstraZeneca admits Covishield can cause blood clots, low platelet count