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FACTBOX-Reaction to EU proposals for car CO2 output
07 Feb 2007 16:00:43 GMT
Source: Reuters

Feb 7 - The European Commission proposed a strategy on Wednesday to curb carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from cars as a way to combat global warming.

Here is how manufacturers, environmentalists and government officials saw the news:

EUROPEAN CARMAKERS ASSOCIATION ACEA

The proposals are unbalanced and damaging to the European economy in terms of wealth, employment and growth potential

JOS DINGS, DIRECTOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL GROUP TRANSPORT & ENVIRONMENT

Today's announcement finally recognises, ten years late, that regulation is needed on CO2 emissions just as it is on safety and other forms of air pollution from cars

GERMAN GOVERNMENT SPOKESMAN ULRICH WILHELM

We welcome the fact that the European Commission is sticking to its goal of 120 grams of CO2 per kilometer. This goal has never been questioned by the Chancellor (Angela Merkel) nor by the government. We also welcome the fact that the goal of 120 grams per kilometre is integrated together with biofuels.

PSA PEUGEOT CITROEN <PEUP.PA> CEO CHRISTIAN STREIFF

The move to the ecological car of the future is a key pillar of PSA's future...We have an advantage in low-CO2-emission cars. We will do everything we can to keep that advantage

GREENS PARTY TRANSPORT EXPERT MICHAEL CRAMER

Today's watered-down compromise on European emission standards means the German auto industry has pushed through its demands via intense lobbying. German corporate chiefs are still blocking Europe's climate policy...but the success today of the German auto lobby will turn out to be a pyrrhic victory

GERMAN CARMAKERS ASSOCIATION VDA PRESIDENT BERND GOTTSCHALK

The announced target proposals are extremely demanding, require massive investments and confront all car manufacturers with enormous and extremely difficult challenges

GERMAN ENVIRONMENT MINISTER SIGMAR GABRIEL

This is a significant technological challenge that the European automotive industry has to face. At the same time, it should recognise that these guidelines are not a job killer. On the contrary, they help secure (automakers') long-term international competitiveness

For related story, double-click on [nL07923213]
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A refugee site is seen in Trinidad, Beni, some 400 km (248 miles) northeast of La Paz, March 9, 2007. Some 51 people have been killed since the extreme weather first hit the country in December last year. Flood-waters are receding in the worst-hit region, Beni, in northeastern Bolivia, but authorities are now worried about possible outbreaks of malaria, yellow fever or dengue among the 20,000 people who are still living in temporary shelters in Beni’s capital, Trinidad. The city is gearing up for a visit on Saturday of leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, whose government has pledged US$15 million in aid for flood-ravaged Bolivia.