Inside the industry: whatever happened to diesel?

Inside the industry: whatever happened to diesel?

Autocar

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From being the darling of Europe, the black pump has since fallen from grace

Remember diesel? In 1997, it was the miracle fuel that could deliver the CO2 targets set out in the Kyoto Protocol. Diesel cars were incentivised by governments and honed by manufacturers onto the driveways of huge numbers of buyers.

In Western Europe, the market share of diesel cars peaked at 56% in 2011, up from 13% in 1990, and it remained the majority fuel of choice through to 2017, its popularity immune to the World Health Organization reporting in 2012 that its fumes caused cancer.

VW’s Dieselgate scandal is often cited as the turning point, although it’s worth noting that the cheating verdict was delivered in September 2015, and it wasn’t until 2017 that all diesel registrations really turned. As more car makers became implicated in scandals of overstating fuel economy figures, so the spotlight shone brighter on the broader implications of burning the fuel.

For a period, its sales collapse was so precipitous that it looked to be heading towards near extinction. Today, diesel’s share of the Western European new car market hovers at around 22%. According to analysts at LMC Automotive, its market share has fallen at an average of 5% a year for the past 2.5 years – around half the rate of the previous 2.5 years.

Who’s exposed? As a percentage of registrations, LMC highlights Alfa Romeo – its premium leanings and popularity in Italy counting against it. (In Italy, diesel retains a 27.9% market share – the fifth largest in Western Europe by percentage and second largest by volume. Ireland leads the way on the former at 36%, and Germany tops the latter.)

Land Rover is second but made the most notable strides of all those in the top 10, taking its share of registrations from around 90% diesel in 2018 to around 60% in the first half of this year.

Nevertheless, overall decline through to 2030 is inevitable, even given arguments for the fuel’s suitability on larger vehicles that run out of town. The moral battle has been lost, whatever the technical merits, and ever-tougher legislation is driving up costs all of the time. Against the backdrop of falling sales, the return on R&D costs is collapsing, which pushes up retail prices, further reducing consumer demand.

I’ve seen it written that the streak of nine diesel- powered Le Mans wins by Audi and Peugeot will come to be regarded as a low point of human folly. That’s harsh, but history is unlikely to view diesel’s 20-year sales reign with much positivity, even in light of its greater economy, CO2-lowering capabilities and more.

*READ MORE*

*Dieselgate: VW gets £248 million in settlement with former execs*

*Analysis: Is this the beginning of the end for diesel cars?*

*Official: Government to ban new petrol and diesel car sales in 2030*

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