Skip to main content

European Commission: tighter rules for safer/cleaner cars

The European Commission (EC), European Parliament and the Council have reached a political agreement on the commission proposal from January 2016 to raise the quality level and independence of type-approval and testing before a car is placed on the market. It would enable the EC to be able to initiate EU-wide recalls and impose penalties on manufacturers or technical services of up to €30,000 (£26,000) per non-compliant car.
December 12, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
The 1690 European Commission (EC), European Parliament and the Council have reached a political agreement on the %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external commission proposal from January 2016 false http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-16-167_en.htm false false%> to raise the quality level and independence of type-approval and testing before a car is placed on the market. It would enable the EC to be able to initiate EU-wide recalls and impose penalties on manufacturers or technical services of up to €30,000 (£26,000) per non-compliant car.


These rules would enforce Member States to carry out regular spot-checks on vehicles already on their market with results made publicly available. In addition, all Member States would be able to immediately take safeguard measures against non-compliant vehicles on their territory without having to wait for the authority that issued the type-approval to act.

Under the proposal, technical services would be regularly and independently audited as part of stringent performance criteria to obtain and maintain their designation by a Member State for testing and inspecting new car models. The EC and Member States would also be able to challenge a designation when something is wrong.

National type-approval authorities would be subject to Commission audits to ensure that the relevant rules are implemented and enforced across the EU.

In the future, the EC will be able to lead a new enforcement forum to ensure uniformity in the interpretation of relevant EU legislation, transparency of non-compliance and more coordinated market surveillance activities by Member States.

Car manufacturers will also have to provide access to the vehicle’s software tools protocols which go in hand with the Real Driving Emissions package to disclose their emissions reductions strategies.

This preliminary political agreement is now subject to formal approval by the European Parliament and Council. It will then become mandatory for all Member States on 1 September 2020.

Elżbieta Bieńkowska, commissioner responsible for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs, said: "Dieselgate has revealed the weaknesses of our regulatory and market surveillance system. We know that some car manufacturers were cheating and many others were exploiting loopholes. To put an end to this, we are overhauling the whole system. After almost two years of negotiations, I welcome that the key elements of our proposal have been upheld, including real EU oversight and enforcement powers. In the future, the Commission will be able to carry out checks on cars, trigger EU-wide recalls, and impose fines of up to €30,000 per car when the law is broken."

8054 FIA Region I director general, Laurianne Krid, responded to the new legislation: “Improving the vehicle type approval process is essential to avoid another dieselgate and to restore consumer confidence in the vehicles that they drive. Although today’s compromise is not perfect, we support stronger market surveillance requirements which should help steer car makers to achieve emissions targets in the real world and not just in the laboratory.”

‘With more and more cars becoming connected, the Commission and Member States now have to look at how independent operators, like our members, can be assured that they will get full and fair access to vehicle information. This is essential so that independent operators cannot only test cars properly but also provide key services to motorists both now and in the future”, Krid added.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • MEPs strengthen vehicle type approval regulations
    February 10, 2017
    In a drive to prevent a recurrence of the VW emissions scandal, the European Parliament’s Internal Market Committee has amended EU car type approval to make environmental and safety testing more independent and strengthen national and EU oversight of cars already on the road. Type approval is the process whereby national authorities certify that a vehicle model meets all EU safety, environmental and production requirements before it can be placed on the market. The proposals would require national m
  • MEPs: action needed to reduce transport emissions for Paris Agreement
    December 18, 2017
    MEPs have called for the full application of existing rules and for the Commission to introduce new measures to reduce transport emissions and meet the Paris Agreement commitments, in a new resolution. It has also requested for them to set new carbon dioxide (CO2) standards for car fleets from 2025 onward, with the intention of phasing out new models of these vehicles.
  • Battery bottleneck: EV roll-out at risk
    June 17, 2019
    In order for the take-up of electric vehicles – a key part of the future mobility mix - to grow, we need batteries. And that might prove tricky, reports Graham Anderson Industry and commodities experts fear that the growth in electric vehicles (EVs) could be much slower than predicted due to bottlenecks in global battery market supply chains. “People seem to think that the switch from the internal combustion engine to electric vehicles just means you plug your car in rather than fill it with petrol,” a
  • EU states support Denmark’s diesel ban proposal
    October 15, 2019
    Ten European Union (EU) countries have backed a proposal from Denmark to ban the sale of diesel and petrol cars by 2040. Danish climate and energy minister Dan Jorgensen told Reuters that the ban will hopefully put pressure on the European Commission to the propose phasing out of fossil fuel-powered vehicles. He also suggested allowing individual countries to implement this measure if the EU could not agree on a union-wide ban. Lithuania, Latvia, Slovenia, Bulgaria and other countries have suggested tha