Thursday, July 18, 2013

Daimler Loses A Round With EU Over R134a Refrigerant, Full EU Commission Meets

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The EU Commission has provisionally sided with France in that country's decision to stop the sale of new Mercedes-Benz cars because of Daimler's decision to continue to use R134a refrigerant in it's HVAC systems. The EU has banned R134a out of concerns for global warming. The only available replacement that meets the new regulations is R1234yf, made by Honeywell, and Mercedes-Benz has insisted that their tests show that the new refrigerant is dangerously flammable and could start an underhood fire under certain conditions. The provisional ruling could be a problem for Daimler in other EU countries.

"Currently in the European market there are vehicles produced by this manufacturer that, according to the preliminary Commission analysis, are not in conformity with their type-approval," EU vice president for trade Antonio Tajani said in a prepared statement on Tuesday. Daimler insists that since the cars were approved by Germany's Kraftfahrt-Bundesamt (Federal Motor Transport Authority), known as KBA, they are legal to sell in France and the rest of the EU. "Our cars have a valid, European-wide permit. Nothing should stand in the way of their being registered."

So far the cars that are affected are the Mercedes A class, B class and the new CLA. The company said that the regulatory blockade could affect about 2% of its global sales, about 29,000 cars. Audi and Volkswagen have also objected to the refrigerant change.

The issue is serious enough that a meeting was scheduled for today (July 17, 2013) with all 28 Member States of the EU sending representatives. A spokeswoman for Tajani told just-auto from Brussels. "Tomorrow afternoon, we are probably going to send a release on the position of the European Commission."



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




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