Government in emissions cover-up: Ministers ordered car manufacturers including Honda, BMW and Ford to give out false information about the amount of CO2 their cars belch out
- Ministers ordered car manufacturers and dealers to give consumers false info
- CO2 emissions are on average 20-25% higher than customers are being told
- Labour’s Shadow Transport Sec, accused the Gov of ‘intentionally misleading’
The Government has deliberately covered up the level of greenhouse gases pumped out by more than three million new vehicles sold in the UK over nearly two years.
Ministers ordered car manufacturers and dealers to give consumers false information about the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) produced by all new vehicles, including supposedly environmentally friendly hybrids.
Astonishingly, CO2 emissions are on average 20-25 per cent higher than customers are being told when buying popular vehicles including Hondas, BMWs, Volkswagens and Fords.
Astonishingly, CO2 emissions are on average 20-25 per cent higher than customers are being told when buying popular vehicles
In some cases, they are much higher. Someone buying a 1.8 litre Toyota Corolla hybrid –judged by What Car? magazine as the best hybrid of 2020 – would currently be told that the vehicle emits 76g of CO2 per kilometre.
In fact, the true figure is 101g/km – a whopping 33 per cent more. A Mail on Sunday investigation has established that some car dealers have a database of the true emission figures – but were instructed by the Government not to publicise them.
Last night, Andy McDonald, Labour’s Shadow Transport Secretary, accused the Government of ‘intentionally misleading the public over vehicle emissions’.
‘Consumers ought to be able to make informed choices to reduce their impact on the climate and it is outrageous that the Government is working against them.’
The secret figures will only be revealed to the public on April 6 – when car tax on new vehicles will suddenly jump. The rise is predicted to give the Treasury an annual £200 million windfall.
The controversy is linked to a new system for testing the emissions and fuel economy of cars that is meant to be more representative of ‘real-world’ driving conditions.
Since September 1, 2018, all new cars have had to conform to the so-called Worldwide harmonised Light vehicle Test Procedure (WLTP).
This replaced a discredited test that had been used since the 1980s called the New European Driving Cycle (NEDC). Experts say NEDC produced CO2 results that were 40 per cent lower than the actual greenhouse gases being emitted.
The controversy is linked to a new system for testing the emissions and fuel economy of cars that is meant to be more representative of ‘real-world’ driving conditions
Car manufacturers and dealers were told to publish the fuel economy figures – measured in miles-per-gallon – from the new tests in their sales brochures, websites and showrooms from January 2019.
But they were banned from publishing the new, higher CO2 figures. Instead, they were ordered to continue using the grossly inaccurate NEDC figures. Guidance seen by the MoS from the Vehicle Certification Agency (VCA), an agency of the Department for Transport (DfT), from November 2018 said that ‘only NEDC CO2 figures will be used on labels and within advertising prior to April 6, 2020’.
Retailers were advised to include a disclaimer that the CO2 figures were derived from the ‘outgoing test cycle’ and that there is a ‘new test’.
It, however, failed to make clear that the results would be significantly different. It means that someone wanting to buy a 1.8 litre Toyota Prius hybrid would currently be told that the vehicle’s CO2 emission is 75g/km. In fact, the updated figure, which will be made public after April 6, is 25 per cent higher at 94g/km.
The Government has attempted to justify the cover-up by claiming that publishing the true figures would have been confusing for motorists. This is because until April, car taxes – which are linked to CO2 emissions – will be based on the false emission figures.
But last night the car industry described the policy as ‘bizarre’ and said they had wanted to be more open with the public.
Last night, Andy McDonald, Labour’s Shadow Transport Secretary, accused the Government of ‘intentionally misleading the public over vehicle emissions’
Jenny Bates, of Friends Of The Earth, said the cover-up was a ‘betrayal of those trying to take emissions into account when choosing a car’. Edmund King, of the AA, said: ‘Car showrooms are following complex Government guidelines on what to display. Drivers care about the environment and many may be in for a big shock – having bought a car displaying the old figures only to find the CO2 output is 25 per cent higher than stated.’
The Mail on Sunday last week visited seven car showrooms and in each one was quoted the lower NEDC emission figures.
Mike Hawes, of the Society of Motor Manufacturers And Traders, said: ‘Manufacturers are not, bizarrely, allowed by law to display WLTP-derived figures in UK showrooms or advertising until April – this is not what the industry wanted.’
Toyota said that while Government regulations prevent it from using WLTP figures in its brochures, staff have been told the figures so they can ‘inform customers’. Its website says that CO2 figures are ‘subject to change for new vehicles registered after April 1’.
The DfT said: ‘The new emissions testing regime from April 2020 provides a closer representation of ‘real-world’ fuel consumption and CO2 emissions, allowing consumers to make more informed decisions.’
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