VW’s emissions scandal surprised many, but it had been brewing for a while, says Paul Nieuwenhuis, Co-Director of Cardiff University's Electric Vehicle Center of Excellence
By andThe Conversation
Although the Volkswagen emissions scandal has caught many by surprise, in fact it has been . It all started when the European wing of the US NGO International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT) set out to prove modern diesels were genuinely clean and would therefore be able to make a significant contribution to improving both CO2 emissions and air quality.
When similar vehicles were subjected to their official test in the California Air Resources Board’s laboratory, however, they passed. The road test emissions numbers in the lab all fell within the accepted levels of NOx emissions. Following investigations into the matter, VW has admitted to . Nearly half a million cars have been recalled for containing “defeat device” software that only turns on the cars' emissions controls when they are undergoing official testing.
Along the way, human health and the impact of toxic tailpipe emissions from vehicles, has taken a backseat. But this approach is increasingly being questioned. Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo, for example, announced plans to ban most diesel vehicles from the city from 2020. Many feel that with potentially low carbon alternatives such as electric and hybrid-electric vehicles increasingly available, as well as, more recently, the first commercial fuel-cell cars, the need for diesel as a carbon reduction technology is becoming less central.
Unanswered questionsmassive loss of share value in recent days, its corporate social and environmental responsibility has taken a severe knock. Diesel cars represent a in Europe and also of vehicles in use.
Others, such as the Brussels-based NGO Transport & Environment are probably less surprised. They have long been among those highlighting the fact that the real world experience of many car owners, even in terms of fuel consumption, that resulted from emissions testing. The question arises of why it takes underfunded NGOs to discover these problems, rather than the regulators themselves.
It is also unclear whether this technique was only used to deal with the particularly tight US and California regulations, or whether it was also used to get around the European test cycle and emissions compliance is . At the same time, it raises serious questions about diesel and public support for this technology may well suffer. What is clear is that this is one of the biggest crises to hit the car industry—and on a par with those that have rocked the banking sector. Perhaps we’ll see the same tightening of regulation that .
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