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EU Car Ban: Will Internal Combustion Engines Survive?

by Priya Shah – Business Editor

Stellantis Proposes Alternatives to EU combustion‍ Engine‍ Ban, Citing Fleet Age Concerns

Munich, Germany – Stellantis⁢ is pushing back against the European Union’s ⁣planned ‍ban on the registration⁤ of new internal combustion ‍engine (ICE) vehicles ‌by 2030, proposing two alternative strategies​ to ‌reduce CO2 emissions without ‌a full transition to‍ electric vehicles, according to statements made at the ⁢Munich Motor show by Jean-Philip ⁢Imparato, president​ of the European branch of the concern. the move ⁣follows similar reconsiderations ⁣from BMW and⁣ a withdrawal of support for the 2030 deadline‍ from other automakers.

Imparato​ revealed the proposals​ have been submitted to ‌the ​European Car Producers (ACEA) and are intended to address CO2 reduction goals while acknowledging ⁢the‌ economic realities of the⁢ automotive ⁢market. One ‌suggestion centers on a⁣ CO2 “compensation”‍ mechanism:​ scrapping‍ older, higher-emission vehicles for newer or used cars less⁢ than ⁣three years old would qualify​ for a 70 ⁤g/km‌ CO2 reduction credit, shielding manufacturers from emission standard penalties.

The second⁣ proposal calls for a ⁣new vehicle class -⁢ urban vehicles‌ under 3.5 meters in length – that would be exempt from ‍current⁢ driver ⁣assistance and safety system requirements. This would allow for the production of affordable ICE ⁣vehicles⁢ with smaller engines,priced ‍under ⁤€15,000. Currently, electric vehicles are considered affordable ⁣starting at €25,000.

Imparato highlighted the aging ⁢European car fleet as‍ a critical ⁤issue. Currently,there are 250 million ⁣vehicles on European roads with an average⁢ age of 12 years (over 18 years in Bulgaria),and 150 million cars ‍are over a ⁢decade​ old. ⁢He warned that increasing vehicle prices driven ⁢by EU regulations are ‌decreasing demand, possibly increasing the average car⁢ age by one​ year annually.In 2018, 49 models were available⁢ in Europe for ⁢under €15,000; that number has drastically diminished today.

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