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Independent today : Letter and Leader article today   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #269 of 3631 |

Merkel wants to protect German car industry and push up biofuel production (and targets) rather than make vehicles more efficient.  Do remember to send the letter (your variant of it) to Mrs Merkel at:

 

http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/AMerkelalert1.doc (English translation) :

her email address: InternetPost@bundesregierung.de

 

if you can.

 

 

 

http://comment.independent.co.uk/letters/article2237640.ece

Sir: It is extremely disturbing that in the same week as the IPPC's devastating report on global warming (3 February) the EU plans for the restriction of CO2 emissions from new cars to 120mg co2/km should be scuppered by Chancellor Angela Merkel in collusion with Germany's powerful motor industry.

So cynical is their attitude that in the past two years German manufacturers have actually stopped production of three excellent lightweight, efficient vehicles which already met the 120mg co2/km standard, the Audi A2 diesel, the VW Lupo diesel and the Smart roadster. Instead they concentrate on ever bigger and more powerful 4x4s, sports cars and limousines which are aimed far more at massaging egos than providing transport.

Because the US is their main market, German manufacturers clearly must accept some responsibility for America's grotesque levels of energy consumption and CO2 emissions from vehicles which will still be in use for 12 or 15 years.

Perhaps it is Germany's unique failure to impose speed limits which has resulted in it turning out so many vehicles wildly inappropriate to the desperately urgent needs of the 21st century? It is tragic that its greedy, short-sighted motor industry is making a nonsense of Germany's otherwise excellent Green credentials.

AIDAN HARRISON

MORPETH, NORTHUMBERLAND

http://comment.independent.co.uk/leading_articles/article2237667.ece

Leading article: Why doesn't Europe make green cars?

Published: 05 February 2007

European officials have a knack for handing rods to Europhobes to beat them with. Just as the world wakes up to the peril of global warming, a European commissioner who shows he is alert to this concern by announcing he will replace his gas-guzzling car with a more environmentally-friendly variety is criticised by colleagues for not choosing a vehicle made in Europe.

Stavros Dimas, the environment commissioner, has, of course, behaved commendably by putting to one side this rather spurious appeal to Euro-patriotism and choosing a less polluting car over the Mercedes and Volkswagens favoured by his colleagues.

It does not matter at all that Mr Dimas is stuck for choice between two Japanese options. This ought to serve as a useful jumping off point into a debate about why the European car industry is so ill prepared to meet the growing public demand for cars that don't actively help to push up the world's thermometer.

European manufacturers, dominated by Germany, have in fact developed several hybrid diesel-electric cars that are quite efficient in terms of CO2 reduction. But for reasons mainly to do with brand recognition they have been reluctant to push them on to the market, preferring to concentrate on their established image as purveyors of models of the old luxury type.

As a result the Japanese have stolen a march on their stodgy and unadventurous rivals, tapping a vein among a wealthy but public-spirited audience, especially in America.

It is easy to mock this trend among the well-to-do for caring about the cars' green credentials as self-indulgent and elitist - the latest passing fetish of a certain kind of Hollywood liberal. Indeed, the environmental savings on some of these hybrid vehicles, especially the larger ones, may be fairly illusory. But the trend is now established and within a relatively short period of time the demand for vehicles that work wholly or partly on clean electricity may be mainstream.

It's too bad that the leaders in the EU seem almost oblivious to the public mood and of the need for public officials to take a symbolic lead.

The commission has already wobbled scandalously over Mr Dimas's plans to enforce a reduction of car emissions to an average of 120 grams per kilometre by 2012. It shows every sign of succumbing to bullying from the German car companies to water down the proposals by taking most or much of the onus off the car-makers.

If the row over Mr Dimas's choice of a Toyota Lexus or Prius throws the spotlight back on this shoddy business, it will have been very useful.

 



Mon Feb 5, 2007 10:36 am

a_boswell_2004
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Merkel wants to protect German car industry and push up biofuel production (and targets) rather than make vehicles more efficient. Do remember to send the...
Andrew Boswell
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Feb 5, 2007
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