nox

I’ve been thinking about this quite a lot recently – and not just because we have some electric car points at our new offices, although that does focus the mind.

But what if BIK was changed to earmark more of the pollutants that affect air quality – such as NOx from car exhausts as well as CO2?

Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, is already preparing drivers into the capital to pay an extra surcharge if their diesel car doesn’t meet new Euro6 exhaust standards. So the issue is clearly in play.

Even France, a mostly diesel-driving nation, wants to go further than the already extreme measures announced by Boris. Starting with a modest rise in tax for diesel vehicles, a scrappage scheme to encourage drivers to go electric and even a plan to ban all diesel cars from the roads of Paris by 2020!

So why, all of a sudden are the knives out for the diesel car?

EU air quality directives are forcing cities and governments to think about pollution more; or face significant fines.

Well, with ever stricter EU air quality directives, to reduce the tens of thousands of deaths currently caused by nitrogen dioxide (the NOx from exhausts reacts in the air to form nitrogen dioxide, or NO2, which can have such a pernicious effect on health) and particle pollution every year in our cities, the spotlight has been firmly placed on the diesel engine as a significant culprit.

And that’s the thing. EU air quality directives are forcing cities – and governments – to think about pollution more; or face significant fines. We had hardly turned our back on 2014 when Oxford Street in London had exceeded EU nitrogen dioxide limits in just four days of 2015. Four days!

And the fines are big: how about the threat of a £300m fine for the UK because it has consistently breached air quality limits? Ouch!

It’s not that the current CO2 based taxation system hasn’t been a brilliant success. It has. The current BIK regime dates back to 2002, when the average emissions were 175g/km. Today that figure is 128.2g/km (source SMMT). It’s be an unqualified success, then, and has been relatively easy to administer.

But can such a simplistic measure of pollution continue? I’m really not so sure. Of course it would need a new type of exhaust measurement to make BIK work. It would be more complex. But it would really focus minds on air quality. You only have to stand on one of London’s busy streets to understand what a difference a hydrogen zero emission bus and a diesel-engined bus make to your local air quality. It’s significant.

In the meantime, though, government messages are mixed.

The move towards ultra low emission vehicles is growing: the Department of Transport has just announced that more than 25,000 plug-in car and plug-in van grant claims have been submitted since the scheme began in 2010.

And yet in 2016/17 tax year, company car diesels will lose the 3% surcharge levied originally because of their sooty emissions.

That doesn’t square to me.

I’m convinced the risks to health, and the threat of significant fines, will change government thinking on company car tax. But, I suspect, only after the General Election….

Will future BIK be based on air quality, not CO2?

I’ve been thinking about this quite a lot recently – and not just because we have some electric car points at our new offices, although that does focus the mind. But what if BIK was changed to earmark more of the pollutants that affect air quality – such as NOx from car exhausts as well … Continued

5 star cars from the Detroit Motor Show

  We’re not even a month into 2015 and while the weather might be cold and snowy outside, the news coming from the car makers is all hot, hot, hot. That’s because the first big motor show of 2015 has kicked off in motor city itself – Detroit. So what was making the news Stateside? … Continued

New year, new fleet

I really don’t go for New Year resolutions – at least on a personal level. You always start off with good intentions and then end up with that inevitable sense of failure as that New Year vim gradually ebbs away. Well, at least in my case it does… But it is always a good time … Continued

All I want for Christmas

Dear Santa, We’ve all been good boys and girls here at Fleet Alliance. Just so you know, we’ve managed to reduce the environmental impact of our clients by lowering the CO2 output of their fleets by over 2 billion grammes. After all, we wouldn’t want to see Santa’s Winter Wonderland Grotto beginning to melt… We’ve … Continued

The end of the company car as we know it?

The diesel car has found itself under attack. First London Mayor Boris Johnson suggests a £12.50 charge for diesel cars entering London – the only exception being for Euro 6 diesels. Then France goes further. French prime minister Manuel Valls wants to progressively ban all diesel cars from France and encourage french drivers to go … Continued

George Osborne plugs into green charge

Just where are you on blurred seasonality? Maybe I’m getting older and more curmudgeonly but I really find it irksome when Christmas starts in the shops mid-November. OK, I know they have a job to do but if you’re not careful the magic of Christmas can run out before the big day finally arrives. There … Continued

Hydrogen cars lift off

Some people accuse me of talking a lot of hot air. Slightly unfair I feel, but sometimes I see their point. Anyway, we like the idea of going green here at Fleet Alliance, not least because we all want cleaner air and a reversal of the polar ice cap melt. Of course, there is a … Continued

Five hotshots from the LA catwalk

Hollywood needs stars – and the honeypot for the film industry had its own beauty parade of talent in the Los Angeles Motor Show. OK, perhaps I should be less formal and more US: the Los Angeles Auto Show, to give the motor expose its proper title, has just ended its glittering run at the … Continued

Ten electrifying car facts

Have you thought about an electric car for your fleet? Although the upfront cost is more than a similar conventional diesel or petrol car, the running costs – from fuel to maintenance – are spectacularly low. Much commentary – quite rightly – has focused on the lack of range: generally up to 100 miles. But … Continued

We are the best!

As red-letter days go, this one in London last week was pretty awesome. For the second successive year we were voted the Best Small Fleet Leasing Company in awards run by the business motoring website for SMEs, Business Car Manager. To be honest, I was really surprised. Not because I don’t think we’re good enough. … Continued