https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/plans-combustion-engine-car-ban-eu-off-table-bild-reports-2025-12-11/
FRANKFURT, Dec 11 (Reuters) – Plans to impose an effective ban on selling new cars with combustion engines in the European Union have been abandoned, a senior EU lawmaker told German mass tabloid Bild on Thursday.Instead, there will be more flexible rules to achieve a reduction in carbon dioxide emissions from cars, Manfred Weber, president of the EPP, the largest party in the European Parliament, was quoted as saying.Make sense of the latest ESG trends affecting companies and governments with the Reuters Sustainable Switch newsletter. Sign up here.“For new registrations from 2035 onwards, a 90% reduction in CO2 emissions will now be mandatory for car manufacturers’ fleet targets, instead of 100%,” Weber told the paper.
“There will also be no 100% target from 2040 onwards. This means that the technology ban on combustion engines is off the table. All engines currently manufactured in Germany can therefore continue to be produced and sold.”Weber said this sent an important signal “to the entire automotive industry and secures tens of thousands of industrial jobs”, reflecting concerns over the future of one of Europe’s most important industries.EU governments, including Germany and Italy, and several automakers have been lobbying for softer regulation, which currently sets a goal to cut carbon emissions from new cars to zero by 2035, effectively banning sales of new combustion-engine vehicles.
Trending
- After Minnesota Fraud Fallout, Hawley Demands Federal Watchdog for Taxpayer Funds
- Venezuela Releases U.S. Detainees Following U.S. Military Capture of Maduro
- Washington Post says FBI searched reporter’s home in classified documents probe
- Beautiful Trouble: How Outrage Is Scripted — and Why Most Protests Look the Same
- Keir Starmer Won’t Ban First-Cousin Marriage, He’s Scared of Muslims
- Deltas are sinking faster than seas rise
- Editor Daily Rundown: Clintons Duck Epstein Testimony Despite Contempt Threat
- Supreme Court Votes 7–2 to Let GOP Congressman Sue Over Ballot-Counting Law