China adopts fuel-efficiency standards.

AuthorSawin, Janet L.
PositionENVIRONMENTAL Intelligence

In early September, China's State Council approved the nation's first fuel economy standards for cars, sport utility vehicles (SUVs), and vans. (Pickup trucks and commercial vehicles are exempt.) Minimum standards will apply for each vehicle model, as they do in Japan, rather than the fleet average, with requirements based on vehicle weight. Standards will be introduced in two phases, with the first beginning July 2005 and the second, stricter phase starting in 2008.

China's new regulations are not as strong as semi-voluntary standards that the auto industry in Europe adopted to avoid formal regulations, but are more stringent than U.S. standards, which have not been tightened in two decades. Most smaller vehicles are expected to meet the initial set of standards, but heavier vehicles will have more difficulty. Manufacturers will have to invest in fuel-saving technologies if they are to continue selling large vehicles in China's rapidly growing market.

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Few Chinese owned private vehicles in the 1980s, but today there are more than 27 million of them and the nation ranks third worldwide (behind the United States and Japan) in auto manufacturing and sales. More than 4.5 million private vehicles...

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