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Porsche could meet EU emissions with VW takeover: commissioner

The VW Polo.
by Staff Writers
Frankfurt (AFP) April 22, 2008
The modest VW Polo could enable German luxury sports car maker Porsche to meet European Union CO2 emissions targets, the EU industry commissioner said in an interview released on Tuesday.

"Porsche is in the clear as soon as a holding company with Volkswagen emerges," Guenter Verheugen told the magazine Capital in an interview posted on its website ahead of full publication on Thursday.

"The Polo could therefore counterbalance the the Porsche 911," he added in reference to Volkswagen's compact model and the trademark sports car made by Porsche.

The EU Commission is drafting a plan to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by cars to 120 grams per kilometer by 2012, along with a system of fines in case the level is surpassed.

But that level might in the end represent an average for all vehicles produced by an automaker rather than apply to each one they produce.

Porsche is already the biggest shareholder in VW, the biggest European car maker, and intends to take a majority holding at some point, bringing both groups under the control of a single holding company.

That could allow it to meet an emissions limit applied across the entire range of models, while German rivals like BMW and Mercedes Benz might face penalties owing to their product lines of powerful cars that emit more CO2.

The EU project has been criticized in Germany as favouring manufacturers in France and Italy that generally produce smaller cars.

Verheugen, who is German, told Capital the EU legislation must "preserve an entire range of products within the European Union."

He also expressed opposition to a proposed "energy account" for each EU citizen.

"Otherwise we could all drive Trabis," he quipped in reference to a car formerly produced in eastern Germany that had a small, but heavily polluting engine.

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Aerodynamic Trailer Cuts Fuel And Emissions By Up To 15 Percent
Delft, Netherlands (SPX) Apr 21, 2008
Creating an improved aerodynamic shape for truck trailers by mounting sideskirts can lead to a cut in fuel consumption and emissions of up to as much as 15%. Earlier promising predictions, based on mathematical models and wind tunnel tests by TU Delft, have been confirmed during road tests with an adapted trailer.







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