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EU lawmakers back diesel test loopholes despite VW scandal
by Staff Writers
Strasbourg, France Feb 3, 2016


EU lawmakers on Wednesday waved through plans to allow diesel car makers to exceed pollution limits, in a big victory for the auto industry after the Volkswagen scandal. The European Commission, the executive arm of the EU's 28 member states, announced the new limits in October as the VW scandal raged, part of plans to adopt more realistic pollution monitoring based on real road conditions instead of laboratory tests. But the proposals contained major loopholes for car-makers that were negotiated secretly by experts from member states, angering environmentalists who reacted with a major push to block the new limits at the European Parliament. MEPs voted 323 in favour of leaving the loopholes -- known as "conformity factors" -- with 317 MEPS voting against them. There were 60 abstentions. The commission has been accused of ignoring evidence that Germany's Volkswagen was massively cheating to pass pollution tests, a revelation made by US regulators. It said in an email that it welcomed parliament's green light, hailing it as a much needed transition to tougher "real-driving" pollution tests. "By better reflecting the actual level of emissions in real driving conditions, these tests will reduce the net amount of air pollution emitted by diesel cars," commission spokeswoman Lucia Caudet said in an email. The commission said Wednesday that a raft of reforms announced last week would tighten the screws on pollution. Europe's auto industry, which employs 12 million people, insisted the new limits were unprecedented. "This regulation will be a major challenge for the industry, with new and more stringent testing standards that will be extremely difficult to reach in a short space of time," said Erik Jonnaert, head of the Brussels-based car lobby ACEA . "However automobile manufacturers welcome the much-needed clarity, and are eager to move forward by implementing the new testing conditions as soon the regulation is adopted," he said. Under the commission's plan, from September 2017 new diesel models would be allowed to exceed the EU's official nitrogen oxide limit by more than double. From 2020, the discrepancy would fall to 50 percent more than the limit, indefinitely. Legal experts at the European Parliament had argued ahead of the vote that the allowances were illegal. "It is intolerable to learn that after the Volkswagen scandal, the member states and the commission conceded to the sirens of the auto industry in allowing it to exceed European anti-pollution limits," said MEP Karima Delli of the Greens group.


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CAR TECH
Renault opens first China factory
Wuhan, China (AFP) Feb 1, 2016
French car giant Renault opened its first car factory in China on Monday, the last major manufacturer to set up a plant in the country as it looks to tap into the world's biggest auto market. The $1.2-billion facility in Wuhan, a carmaking hub in the central province of Hubei, is a joint venture with Chinese manufacturer Dongfeng and will have an initial production capacity of 150,000 vehicl ... read more


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