Employee at the Mercedes-Benz plant in Sindelfingen: what is supposed to be hidden under the sheet metal remains controversial.
Image: dpa
At this year’s Vienna Motor Symposium, experts discussed the path to climate-neutral transport. Accordingly, by 2039, the sale of fossil fuels could be completely dispensed with.
The message of many of the presentations at this year’s Vienna Motor Symposium was to get from the conflict of different drive concepts to a reasonable coexistence, at least for a while. The common denominator was climate-neutral transport, but there does not seem to be a uniform way to get there for the time being. In Europe, according to Stefan Hartung, chairman of the Bosch board of management, every second new car will be electric by 2030, but worldwide two out of three cars will still have a combustion engine under the hood in the coming decade, so a differentiated strategy is needed.
Ulrich Kramer from Ford tried to prove that a technology-open scenario would already enable a 92 percent reduction in CO2 emissions from all road traffic by 2035, which is significantly faster than the European Commission had announced. Together with around 50 experts organized in the FVV research association, he first calculated the emissions for various combinations of drives and energy sources in detail, taking into account the indirect emissions for the development of the necessary infrastructure and the production of the vehicles.