An Taisce seeks climate and public health action on vehicle emissions reduction

an-taisce

An Taisce has written to the Taoiseach and other Government Minsters to raise concerns that the Climate Action and Low Carbon Development (Amendment) Bill 2020 presented on 7th October 2020, fails to ensure that new cars and vans sold after 2030 emit no tailpipe emissions, contrary to the Programme for Government.

In September 2020 the interdepartmental Tax Strategy Group (TSG) report “Climate Action and Tax” set out recommendations to address both the greenhouse gas and air pollution impact of vehicle emissions.

The TSG report confirmed that transport emissions are “on an unsustainable trajectory” and “private cars are responsible for around twice as much annual CO2 emissions than Heavy Goods Vehicles and Light Commercial vehicles combined”. It presented the 2019 data showing “a massive increase in the market share of SUVs (from a market share of about 19% in 2013 to about 45% in 2019), as well as very high volumes of used imports with above average CO2 emission profile”.

The TSG set out three overarching objectives:

  • Deliver on the Government’s climate action goals to the greatest extent possible;
  • Maintain a level playing field between cars tested under the NEDC and WLTP testing regimes; and
  • Ensure that the environmental health rationale in the regime, in the form of the NOx surcharge, continues to act as a strong disincentive to the acquisition of highly polluting cars.

A range of Vehicle Registration (including NOx surcharge), Motor, and Company Vehicle tax options were set out to meet these objectives.

It is An Taisce’s submission that the most progressive measures outlined by the TSG should be adopted in Budget 2021 and integrated with action on climate and air quality.

These recommendations are in the national interest in confronting the climate emergency. We would highlight that the July 2020 Supreme Court judgment struck down the current National Mitigation Plan for breaching the Climate Action and Low Carbon Development Act 2015, for failing to provide effective mitigation measures.

In addition to this is the overwhelming public health imperative of addressing air pollution. Last month, in their latest Air Quality in Ireland report, the EPA confirmed that a monitoring station at St. John’s Road, Inchicore, had established that the EU NOx emission ceiling level had been breached, and that other areas of the Dublin city centre were likely to be affected. This also raised the issue of inadequate monitoring in other Irish cities.

Furthermore, emerging international evidence suggests that crash impacts with SUVs more frequently result in death than standard passenger cars. Similarly, a growing body of research demonstrates that SUVs have significantly greater environmental impacts than standard passenger cars in relation to a number of indicators (see the attached annex on SUVs).

On 7th October 2020, a deputy Government press secretary suggested that Ireland needs to wait for EU approval before taking any measures affecting the sale of new fossil-powered vehicles after 2030 . This is not accurate: it is entirely open to Government to set an environmental performance standard applying to the sale of new vehicles from 1st January 2030. There is a long line of EU legal precedent which confirms Member States’ discretion to take proportionate measures to protect the environment and public health of their citizens, stretching back to the 1980s with the Danish Bottle judgement (Case 302/86).

It is of grave concern that the publication of The Climate Action and Low Carbon Development (Amendment) Bill 2020 and associated Government announcements did not commit to the implementation of the TSG vehicles emission recommendations, along with action to be taken in the forthcoming budget

From media coverage it is obvious that there has been major lobbying by the motor vehicle sales sector against any effective taxation measures to incentivise the purchase of less polluting vehicles as the TSG report advises.

An Taisce has advanced the following as action requests:

  1. That national climate action and public health interests prevail and the most progressive taxation recommendation of the TSG should be adopted in the forthcoming budget, as well as an equalisation of petrol and diesel taxation and the removal of the farm diesel subsidy.
  2. That the Climate Action and Low Carbon Development (Amendment) Bill 2020 be amended to contain an explicit provision that ensures that new cars and vans sold after 2030 emit no tailpipe emissions.
Sarah Brooks

Sarah Brooks

Sarah has worked in marketing and content creation for many years. In her role at Newsgroup, she is the online editor of www.newsgroup.ie with a particular interest in local news and events. Sarah also works closely with our editorial team on our printed editions in Tallaght, Lucan, Clondalkin and Rathcoole/Saggart. If you have a story and would like to make contact please email Sarah at info@newsgroup.ie.

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