The European Union will require the carbon dioxide emissions of new cars sold to be reduced to 95g per kilometer by 2020, from its current 130g per km, according to a new draft law approved on Wednesday by the European Parliament's Environment Committee.
A total of 91 new energy vehicles are displayed at the on-going Shanghai auto show 2013. Among them, 56 models are made by international carmakers, while there are 35 Chinese carmakers.
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Hybrid luxury and super cars rush to meet standards
International luxury carmakers tend to employ hybrid technology to reduce emissions. German luxury carmaker BMW showed its Active Hybrid concept cars, while Mercedes displayed BlueEfficiency technology at the ongoing Shanghai auto show 2013. Audi and Lexus drove a bit of further with their mass production models Audi Q5 hybrid and Lexus GS300h and ES300h.
Super carmakers who seldom consider emission control joined the hybrid rush this year. Italian's newly launched LaFerrari and Lamboghini Veneno are the hybrid pearl on the super sports crown. German Porsche also has the Panamera S E-Hybrid ready, while British carmaker Aston Martin will make its super sports car hybrid on demand.
The driving force may be the "super credits" stipulated in the newly approved draft law: Carmakers earn "super credits" when they produce cars that emit less than 50g of CO2. Within each manufacturer's "balance", each of these extra clean cars would count as 3.5 cars that failed to meet the regulation in 2013. The credit will fall to 1.5 from 2016, and 1 from 2024.
The draft law will exempt carmakers producing fewer than 1,000 cars a year from the legislation. So Rolls-Royce and Bently may happily use their fuel-guzzling engine without worrying about carbon dioxide emissions.
Fully electric cars target a cleaner future
Volvo Car are offering mature hybrid cars, while also developing pure electric concept cars.
While the automobile giants do not believe that fully electric technology will pay back in the near future, their joint venture brands or sub-brand will still go with electric, including BMW-Brilliance Automotive's Zinoro, Daimler-BYD’s Denza, and BMW's Mini E and Mercedes SLS AMG Electric.
There are clearly problems with fully electric vehicles, around the infrastructure necessary for those to run, according to Bew.
US luxury sports car maker Detroit Electric, a new player, bet its future on electric power in the high-end segments. The company offers only fully electric sports cars, and gives out a charging pile at purchase.
Fully electric power guarantees zero car emissions, as well as swift acceleration, quick response, and quiet engine operation. This has been seen in the fully electric sports cars including Mercedes SLS AMG Electric and Mini E.
"The pure electric motor is very small, and efficient in delivering a very good performance," said Lam
Story: Hao Yan
Video: Liu Zheng
Animation: Liu Zheng
Producer: Nie Peng