Cartell.ie has reported on a rise in CO2 emissions in the Irish fleet.
In 2021, it looked at the state of CO2 emissions in the private transport sector for the first 10 months of the year and compared the results to the first 10 months of the year for each year since 2003.
In November the international GOP26 stressed the urgent need for Governments to introduce measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions including in the private transport sector.
According to their report, the situation has “deteriorated” over the last 12 months, while Cartell has stated that “the gains which we noted were recorded in 2020 have not been consolidated in respect of our emission of CO2”.
In a development for Government there has been an upturn in the average CO2 emissions of new vehicles sold in Ireland: in 2021 average emissions increased recording a reading of 112g CO2 /km.
This is a level equivalent to what was recorded in 2018 and far above the level of 105g CO2 /km that Cartell says it observed for the equivalent period last year.
It adds that it considered the data further for each of the various vehicle price segments to see which segment is performing the best and which is the worst.
The best segment, showing the lowest CO2 emissions, was the most expensive segment considered – vehicles over €60,000 in value. This segment brought in average emissions of just 90 CO2 /km down from 127 CO2 /km for the equivalent period last year, according to the report.
It found that the worst performing segment for emissions were those vehicles at the other end of the scale – vehicles priced at €20,000 or less recorded a figure of 122 CO2 /km.
“We are looking exclusively at new vehicles sold in Ireland and not at imported vehicles. It is unfortunate that the figures for CO2 /km in the private transport sector are increasing, just when we thought things had shifted in a favourable direction.
“The Government will have to seriously consider these results which show that it is the cheaper new cars which are doing the damage – CO2 /km for new cars priced less than €20,000 are the highest of any segment.
“The reason for this is pretty straightforward: electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles are bringing down the overall level of emissions in the more expensive segments. Until the price of these vehicle types reduces we face an uphill battle in bringing down fleet CO2 /km any further.
“At the other end of the market, these results show that those with cash to splurge on an expensive car are thinking about the environment: this is one good thing to come out of these findings," Jeff Aherne, innovation lead at Cartell.ie said.