24hoursworld

The federal government and the EU Commission settle disputes over combustion engines

The federal government and the EU Commission settle disputes over combustion engines

After weeks of dispute, the federal government and the EU Commission have reached an agreement to end new cars with internal combustion engines.

The federal government has reached an agreement with the EU Commission in the dispute over the future of cars with combustion engines. This was announced by Transport Minister Volker Wissing and EU Commission Vice-President Frans Timmermans on Saturday. Wissing announced that the agreement was reached late yesterday evening. The way has been cleared for vehicles with combustion engines that only use climate-neutral fuels to be re-registered after 2035. According to Wissing, concrete procedural steps and a concrete schedule have been fixed in a binding manner. “We want the process to be completed by autumn 2024.”

Timmermans wrote on Twitter: “We have reached an agreement with Germany on the future use of e-fuels in cars.” Work will now be done to ensure that the regulation on CO2 standards for cars is passed as soon as possible.

The European Parliament and EU states had already agreed in October that only emission-free new cars may be registered in the EU from 2035. For Germany, however, it is important that new cars with combustion engines that fill up with e-fuels can still be registered afterwards – i.e. climate-neutral artificial fuels that are produced with green electricity. A confirmation of the agreement by the EU states, which was planned for early March, was therefore initially prevented by Germany. Since then, the Federal Ministry of Transport and the EU Commission have been negotiating a compromise.

Many EU partners had reacted with irritation to Germany’s behavior in the dispute. On Thursday, Latvian Prime Minister Krisjanis Karins spoke in front of the cameras on the sidelines of the EU summit of a “very, very difficult sign for the future”. It is surprising that a government suddenly decides differently after an agreement has already been reached.

Karins warned, “The whole architecture of decision-making would fall apart if we all did that.” Diplomats in Brussels expressed themselves more clearly behind closed doors. They accuse Germany of a breach of trust.

More soon on stern.de

Source: Stern

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Posts