Germany says making progress in EU talks on 2035 ban on fossil fuel cars

BERLIN, March 20 (Reuters) – Talks between Germany’s Transport Ministry and the European Commission about the planned end of new combustion engines from 2035 are moving forward, the ministry said on Monday, but added it could not say when agreement would be reached.

After months of negotiations, the European Parliament, the Commission and EU member states agreed last year to the law that would require new cars sold in the European Union from 2035 to have zero CO2 emissions – effectively making it impossible to sell combustion engine cars from that date.

But Germany this month declared its last-minute opposition. It wants sales of new cars with internal combustion engines to be allowed after that date if they run on e-fuels.

“There are positive trends that are a good basis for further talks,” a spokesman for the ministry told a news conference.

Last week, the ministry, run by the Liberal Free Democrats (FDP) party, proposed that the Commission, the EU executive, should provide a separate vehicle category for cars that run only on e-fuels, a letter from the ministry to the Commission seen by Reuters showed.

The Commission was not immediately available for comment on the letter, which also suggested allowing carmakers to count such cars towards complying with CO2 targets.

Such changes are legally problematic as the European Parliament has approved the regulations agreed between the bloc’s member states and the Commission, meaning any change could be complicated and time-consuming.

An EU official said member states had been told at a meeting in November that the Commission would make a proposal on registering cars running on e-fuels after 2035, but only after the car CO2 law is finally adopted.

Reporting by Riham Alkousaa, Markus Wacket in Berlin, Kate Abnett in Brussels; editing by Barbara Lewis