Confirmed: EU halts petrol and diesel vehicle sales by 2035
Outcome not welcomed by all as job loss worries emerge.
New diesel and petrol vehicles no longer allowed for sale in Europe by 2035. Image: iStock
The European Parliament voted on Tuesday (14 February) to approve a ban on new sales of petrol and diesel cars by 2035, clearing the final legislative hurdle.
Majority vote wins
EU member states have already approved the legislation and will now formally nod it into law, despite opposition from conservative MEPs, the parliament’s biggest group.
It would give European carmakers a clear timeframe in which switch production to zero-emission electric vehicles, supporters of the bill had argued.
This in turn will support the European Union’s ambitious plan to become a “climate neutral” economy by 2050, with net-zero greenhouse gas emissions.
“Let me remind you that between last year and the end of this year China will bring 80 models of electric cars to the international market,” EU vice-president Frans Timmermans warned MEPs.
“These are good cars. These are cars that will be more and more affordable, and we need to compete with that. We don’t want to give up this essential industry to outsiders.”
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Opposition worried
But opponents argued that industry is not ready for such a dramatic cut off in production of internal combustion engine vehicles, and that hundreds of thousands of jobs are at risk.
“Our proposal is … to let the market decide what technology is our best to reach our goals,” said MEP Jens Gieseke, a member of the centre-right European People’s Party.
Arguments from Green and socialist MEPs that electric cars are cheaper to run had been rendered “null and void” by the crisis of soaring energy costs, Gieseke declared.
“In Germany 600 000 people work on ICE production, those jobs are at risk,” he declared, urging the European Commission to rethink plans to also extend the ban to trucks and buses.
Opponents also argue car batteries are produced abroad by Europe’s competitors like the United States, but Timmermans argued that thanks to EU-backed investment European production would increase.
The Strasbourg assembly passed the law by 340 votes to 279, with 21 abstentions.
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