Mercedes-Benz EU emissions jump under new testing regime

Reuters  |  FRANKFURT 

(Reuters) - will push electric and hybrid more aggressively after tougher emissions tests revealed pollution levels in at rose 7 percent last year.

However, an emissions test-cheating scandal at in 2015 caused regulators to introduce more stringent testing methods to reflect real-world driving conditions, which has caused average emissions readings to rise across the industry.

The new procedures combined with a shift in customer tastes towards (SUVs) lifted average fleet emissions levels at the company's Mercedes and Smart passenger in to 134 grams of CO2 per km in 2018, up from 125 grams in 2017.

This makes it harder to lower average fleet emissions levels to a target of 105 grams/km by 2021.

"It will lead to even stronger electrification," said Jochen Hermann, at Cars.

Cars will increase the number of hybrid and electric vehicles to 20 models by 2020, up from five models in 2018. By 2025 up to 40 percent of passenger cars will be electric or hybrid cars, said.

"We expect to meet the target," a said about the 2021 expectations.

EU lawmakers agreed in December to a further 37.5 percent cut in CO2 emissions between 2021 and 2030.

(Reporting by Edward Taylor; Editing by David Goodman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 15 2019. 15:27 IST