Kingmaker Renew decides the fate of Euro 7 Ahead of a crucial vote in the Parliament’s Environment Committee on Thursday (12 October), the centrist Renew group has signalled they will align with the centre-right EPP and conservative ECR in backing a milder version of the Euro 7 proposal, dashing the hopes of the socialists and Greens. While the EPP and ECR groups were always against a wide-ranging Euro 7 – a Commission proposal to further tighten vehicle pollution standards – the liberal Renew group played their cards somewhat closer to their chest. In opposing the Commission’s text, the conservatives highlighted the industrial burden of mandating fresh changes to combustion engines. Doing so would not only push up the cost of new cars for consumers, they argued, but it would divert money from the transition to zero-emission vehicles – the real silver bullet for vehicle air pollution. “The proposed Euro 7 standard will harm consumers and the manufacturers. Its impacts are disproportionate to its positive environmental effects,” said MEP Alexandr Vondra of ECR, the lead lawmaker on the file. Meanwhile, the centre-left S&D group and the Greens pushed in the opposite direction, calling for an even more ambitious version of the law on health grounds. The socialists and greens emphasised air quality, noting that a watered-down Euro 7 would condemn thousands to die prematurely from respiratory illness, particularly in traffic-heavy cities. The fleet of combustion engine cars will remain with us for decades to come, they reminded those opposed. Reducing the level of permitted pollutants, such as particulates and carbon monoxide, would benefit not just this generation but the next. This schism put Renew in something of a kingmaker role. The support of the centrists was crucial to both camps to ensure their preferred version of the law got over the line. So, which way would Susana Solís Pérez, the Renew shadow rapporteur, lean? Would she put the emphasis on removing financial roadblocks to the electric transition? Or focus on improving air quality before EVs become the norm? |