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Opinionopinion

Diesel's decline set to continue

Professor David Bailey says that diesel technology faces a raft of challenges, each one of which could damage sales and are combining to kill off the diesel sector

Zero emission cars, such as electric vehicles, pay no tax

Diesel's slow death continues.

Diesel technology faces a raft of challenges, each one of which could damage sales, and which are combining to kill off the diesel sector, which was so rattled by the ‘dieselgate’ scandal.

Diesel’s market share was already under question in some countries owing to concerns over urban air quality even before Volkswagen’s dieselgate scandal really blew things up in late 2015.

VW, or course, was forced to reveal that it had cheated in the United States in making out that its diesels were clean. It has cost the firm dearly in fines, compensation, discounts and much more, and more recently the firm has had to reorientate investment towards electric cars.

The whole market has been affected as a consumer shift away from diesels gathered pace.

Sales of diesels in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ for example are set to fall by up to 10 per cent in 2018, and they could have as little as 30 per cent of the market by 2020 – shrinking rapidly to 15 per cent by 2025. And this is despite diesels accounting for 50 per cent or more of the market just a few years ago.

In Germany, Europe’s biggest car market, diesel sales dropped last month to 33% of the market, down from 45% a year before.

New research by Greenpeace has suggested that while some new diesels – especially those using ‘Selective Catalytic Reduction’ technology are clean in terms of Nitrogen Oxide (NOx) emissions, others are not, and fail to meet what are termed Euro 6 standards.