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Paris gives 6-month delay for new crackdown on polluting cars
by AFP Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Feb 2, 2022

Hybrid car sales equal to diesel in Europe: industry data
Paris (AFP) Feb 2, 2022 - Sales of hybrid cars in Europe equalled those of diesel vehicles for the first time last year, while electric models also gained more ground, industry data showed on Wednesday.

The figures come as the European Commission aims to ban the sale of new fossil fuel cars from 2035 and automakers have unveiled plans to transition to an electric future.

Hybrid electric vehicles accounted for nearly 20 percent of new passenger cars registered across the European Union in 2021, up from 11.9 percent, according to the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association.

Fully electric cars represented 9.1 percent of total car registrations, up from 5.4 percent in 2020, with a boost from government programmes to subsidise their purchase and growing output by automakers.

Petrol cars still crowd the roads, however, with a leading 40 percent market share.

Drivers of older cars in Paris and its suburbs will have a bit more breathing room before the vehicles are largely banned as part of anti-pollution efforts, with the latest crackdown now set to come in force only next year.

Authorities have gradually been removing the oldest and most-polluting vehicles from Paris streets over the past several years with the introduction of mandatory emission ranking stickers, called Crit'air levels.

The move was spearheaded by Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, who is playing up her green credentials as the Socialist Party candidate to challenge Emmanuel Macron in the looming presidential election.

She has pledged to ban diesel vehicles outright in the city by the opening of the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, and is planning a near-total traffic ban in the heart of the capital, one of the densest urban landscapes in Europe.

On July 1, the ban on older cars in the greater Paris region was to be extended to Crit'air Class 3 vehicles, which include all gasoline-engine cars made before January 2006 -- and all diesel-engine cars from before 2011.

That would have affected more than 1.2 million vehicles, as a two-page spread in the popular Parisien tabloid reminded readers on Tuesday.

However "the next stage for the Low-Emission Zone... has been postponed to at least 2023," the Paris Metropolitan Authority (MGP) said late Tuesday.

It attributed the delay to a need for additional financial aid for low-income households to buy more recent cars, and to the rollout of standardised radars for automated checks.

Older cars, light trucks and motorcycles will be prohibited from 8:00am to 8:00pm on weekdays within Paris and its nearest suburbs, a zone with a population of some 7.2 million people.

The MGP says on its website that similar schemes "already adopted in 231 European cities or regions... have proved particularly effective in cutting traffic emissions."

But critics say the crackdown penalises in particular suburban residents and workers who do not have easy access to efficient public transportation, forcing them to rely more on their cars.


Related Links
Car Technology at SpaceMart.com


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Tesla reports record profit, sees more supply chain woes in 2022
New York (AFP) Jan 27, 2022
Tesla rode rising demand for electric vehicles to a record $5.5 billion profit in 2021, but Elon Musk's company cautioned Wednesday that supply chain problems would continue to crimp production through 2022. The electric carmaker, which scored an 87 percent jump in auto deliveries last year in spite of the global semiconductor shortage, reported a 71 percent rise in revenues to $53.8 billion. But Tesla said it saw no immediate relief from supply chain woes that have hit activity "for several qua ... read more

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