Skip to main content

European Commissioner blasts auto industry on defeat device scandal

Speaking at the FIA summer cocktail party, European Commissioner Elżbieta Bieńkowska compared the emissions defeat device scandal to the banking crisis and proposed a three step programme to ensure that market confidence is restored. She insisted on the need for the auto industry to show all their cards so that constructive progress could be made. Her plans include the need to reform the EU's type-approval and market surveillance system. She also endorsed long-term investment in a low-carbon transport syst
July 12, 2016 Read time: 2 mins

Speaking at the FIA summer cocktail party, European Commissioner Elżbieta Bieńkowska compared the emissions defeat device scandal to the banking crisis and proposed a three step programme to ensure that market confidence is restored. She insisted on the need for the auto industry to show all their cards so that constructive progress could be made. Her plans include the need to reform the EU's type-approval and market surveillance system.

She also endorsed long-term investment in a low-carbon transport system and a clear policy target for zero emission vehicles. Her final step was to make the vehicle testing regime fit for the future, through the real-driving emissions packages and the newly approved test cycle for CO2.

In his speech Günther Oettinger, Commissioner for the Digital Economy and Society, made a firm commitment to include consumer voices in the development of the connected car market, saying that it is the 350 million drivers in Europe that are the investors in the automotive market and the industry has a responsibility to create vehicles that respond to consumer needs. He voiced his support for data protection with connected cars and European digital civil rights. He concluded with the need to define who owns the data that connected cars generate, be it the driver, the auto manufacturer, or the telecoms provider.

Also at the event, racing driver Tom Kristensen highlighted the need for constant training and updating of road safety knowledge to keep road users aware of changing rules, new technologies and new requirements on drivers. He emphasised that traffic education and driver training is a lifelong endeavour, saying that new technologies are increasingly becoming the norm and drivers need additional information on how these technologies affect the rules of the road.

Related Content

  • South Africa launches electric vehicle pilot programme
    February 28, 2013
    South Africa’s Department of Environmental Affairs (DEA) has launched a zero emission electric vehicle pilot programme, which would see it trial a fleet of electric vehicles. Speaking at the launch, water and environmental affairs minister Edna Molewa said the multi-stakeholder partnership project would pilot, test and demonstrate the viability of electric vehicles under South African conditions. The pilot programme would also serve to determine end-user, infrastructure and running costs associated with loc
  • 90,000 e-truck charge points needed, says Scania boss
    April 28, 2020
    European auto group calls for massive increase in charging points for electric trucks.
  • ETSC welcomes EU plans for safer cars, vans and lorries
    December 20, 2016
    The European Commission has published a list of 19 lifesaving safety technologies that could be made mandatory on new vehicles in the next update of EU vehicle safety rules expected next year. The European Transport Safety Council (ETCS) welcomes the announcement but says several critical areas for action are missing, and the proposed timescale is far too long considering that most of the technologies are already available. ETSC says 26,000 people die on European Union roads annually, with at least
  • FIA welcomes adoption of eCall legislation
    April 29, 2015
    The European Parliament has voted to adopt the eCall type-approval legislation, mandating emergency call technology as a standard feature in all new vehicles from 2018. Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) Region I has welcomed the outcome, while also regretting the three-year delay in implementation. Thierry Willemarck, president of FIA Region I, said: “Road safety has triumphed today. eCall has finally passed through all the necessary steps and will become mandatory in 2018. However, I hope