Car owners face fuel shock in Europe

epa06112785 (FILE) - The logo of the car manufacturer Porsche is reflected on the dark paint of a Porsche Cayenne while doing the lettering 'diesel' on the car in Stuttgart, Germany, 04 November 2015. German Transport Minister Alexcander Dobrindt on 27 July 2017 said a forbidden system to shut off cleaning of diesel exhaust emissions has been found to have been installed in 3 Liter diesel engines of Porsche Cayenne SUV models. Dobrindt said a total of 22,000 vehicles Europe-wide will have to be called in to fix the problem.  EPA/CHRISTOPH SCHMIDT GERMANY OUT

Bloomberg

Car owners in Europe are paying about $460 a year more than they expected for fuel because of a record gap between what vehicles actually burn on the road compared with manufacturers’ data, according to a study from the International Council on Clean Transportation. Carbon dioxide emissions on the road are 42 percent higher on average than the official figures from carmakers, the organisation, which helped uncover Volkswagen AG’s cheating on diesel emissions, said in a summary of the report released.
The difference was just 9 percent in 2001, which means most claims of efficiency improvements only showed up in lab tests, according to the ICCT.
“The gap between sales-brochure figures and the real world has reached another all-time high,” said Uwe Tietge, author of the study that analysed data from 1.1 million vehicles in eight European countries.
While emissions gaps exist in the US, Japan and China, Europe has the biggest discrepancy between official data and road results because of loose regulations and limited enforcement, according to the ICCT. The European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, is due to announce a proposal to address vehicle pollution this week.
Scrutiny on vehicle emissions has intensified since Volkswagen’s cheating scandal erupted more than two years ago. The crisis has sapped demand for diesel models and prompted automakers to step up investment in electric vehicles. The so-called Worldwide Harmonized Light Vehicles Test Procedure is in the process of being rolled out in Europe and should bring official figures closer to real-world emissions.
“But even the new test procedure contains new loopholes that could permit the performance gap to increase again in the future,” Peter Mock, ICCT’s managing director, said.

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