A spokesman for the German environment ministry has said it believes the European Commission will propose quotas for electric cars in its next review of measures to cut emissions.
The EC, the executive body of the European Union, said on Monday it had no plans to introduce quotas for electric cars for an automobile sector seeking to recover from the Volkswagen diesel scandal.
Reuters Newsagency reports a spokeswoman for the German environment ministry, which is run by the Social Democrats (SPD), the junior partner in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s ruling coalition, said without quotas for electric cars the EU could miss its carbon dioxide emissions targets.
The SPD, Chancellor Merkel’s main rival in September’s election, wants a European-wide quota to accelerate the shift towards electric cars, the SPD’s general secretary said.
“There must be ambitious targets, otherwise we won’t make any headway,” Hubertus Heil told Reuters.
He added that he was not, however, in favour of setting a specific date to take diesel motors out of service.
The SPD, which is lagging far behind Chancellor Merkel’s conservatives in opinion polls, is in favour of tax incentives to accelerate the switch to electric cars.
A plan laid out by SPD leader Martin Schulz said an obligatory minimum number of electric cars for Germany and Europe would give car markers incentives to develop new technologies.
He did not suggest specific numbers.
Chancellor Merkel has repeatedly warned against “demolishing” diesel engines.
The Stuttgarter Zeitung newspaper cited several members of Chancellor Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU) as criticising the SPD’s suggestions of a quota.
“Set quotas remind me of a planned economy and that has never been successful,” Norbert Barthle, deputy transport minister and CDU member, was quoted as saying.
Britain said last month it would ban the sale of new petrol and diesel cars from 2040 in an attempt to reduce air pollution.
The global automotive industry debate could one day herald the end of more than a century of reliance on the combustion engine.





