EU to relent on combustion engines ban after auto industry pressure

<p>The EU is reportedly set to allow up to 10% of new non-electric vehicles after 2035, yielding to pressure from Germany, Italy, and the auto sector. </p>
The EU is reportedly set to allow up to 10% of new non-electric vehicles after 2035, yielding to pressure from Germany, Italy, and the auto sector.

The European Commission is set to backtrack on the EU’s ban on new combustion-engine cars from 2035 by allowing up to 10 per cent of non-electric vehicles after intense pressure from Germany, Italy and Europe’s auto sector.

The EU executive appears to have yielded to the call from carmakers to be allowed to keep selling plug-in hybrids and range extenders with CO2-neutral biofuel or synthetic fuel as they struggle to compete against Tesla and Chinese electric vehicles.

The move, which will need approval by EU governments and the European Parliament, would be the EU’s most significant climb-down from its green policies of the past five years.

Carmakers such as Volkswagen and Fiat owner Stellantis have pushed for an easing of targets and fines for missing them. European automotive lobby group ACEA called it “high noon” for the sector, adding that the Commission should ease intermediate 2030 targets as well.

However, the electric vehicle industry says this will undermine investment and result in the EU yielding even more ground to China in the shift to EVs.

“Moving from a clear 100 per cent zero-emissions target to 90 per cent may seem small, but if we backtrack now, we won’t just hurt the climate. We’ll hurt Europe’s ability to compete,” said Polestar CEO Michael Lohscheller.

William Todts, executive director of clean transport advocacy group T&E, said the EU was playing for time while China was racing ahead.

“Clinging to combustion engines won’t make European automakers great again,” he said.

The Commission will also detail plans to boost the share of EVs in corporate fleets, notably company cars, which account for about 60 per cent of Europe’s new car sales. The precise measure is not clear, but there may be an insistence on some local content. The auto industry wants incentives rather than mandatory targets.

The EU executive is also likely to propose a new regulatory category for small EVs that would incur lower taxes and earn extra credits towards meeting CO2 targets.

Credits might also be earned through more sustainable production, such as vehicles made with low-carbon steel.

  • Published On Dec 16, 2025 at 11:51 AM IST

Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals.

Subscribe to Newsletter to get latest insights & analysis in your inbox.

All about ETAuto industry right on your smartphone!

Go to Source