EXCLUSIVE -EU drafts plan to allow e-fuel combustion engine cars - document

This would include a "fuelling inducement system" to stop the car from starting if it was fuelled by non-carbon neutral fuels, it said. The proposal could offer a route for car manufacturers to keep selling combustion engine vehicles after 2035, the date when a planned EU law is set to ban the sale of new CO2-emitting cars.


Reuters | Updated: 21-03-2023 16:57 IST | Created: 21-03-2023 16:43 IST
EXCLUSIVE -EU drafts plan to allow e-fuel combustion engine cars - document
Representative image Image Credit: Pixabay

The European Commission has drafted a plan allowing sales of new cars with internal combustion engines that run only on climate neutral e-fuels, in an attempt to resolve a spat with Germany over the EU's phasing out of combustion engine cars from 2035.

The draft proposal, seen by Reuters on Tuesday, suggests creating a new type of vehicle category in the European Union for cars that can only run on carbon neutral fuels. Such vehicles would have to use technology that would prevent them from driving if other fuels are used, the draft said. This would include a "fuelling inducement system" to stop the car from starting if it was fuelled by non-carbon neutral fuels, it said.

The proposal could offer a route for car manufacturers to keep selling combustion engine vehicles after 2035, the date when a planned EU law is set to ban the sale of new CO2-emitting cars. After months of negotiations, EU countries and the European Parliament agreed the law last year. But Germany's Transport Ministry surprised other countries this month by lodging last-minute objections to the law, days before a final vote that would have seen it enter into force.

The Ministry's core demand is that the EU allow sales of new cars running on e-fuels after 2035. The Ministry was not immediately available for comment. On Monday, the Ministry said talks with the Commission about the planned end of new combustion engines from 2035 were moving forward, but added it could not say when an agreement would be reached.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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