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http://www.bbc.com/news/business-33254803
EnergyHarnessing the power of the oceanChina eyes shift in energy policyIce 
cold water heats whole cityWind turbines take to the skiesIn the 1920s, 
pregnant women were encouraged to drink Guinness to increase their iron 
intake.For decades we were all told to avoid fatty butter and eat synthetic 
margarine. Both pieces of health advice have since been discredited.We are now 
learning that millions of motorists who've bought diesel cars believing they 
were less harmful to the environment have been equally misguided.Diesel cars 
emit less carbon dioxide (CO2) than their petrol equivalent, we were told. In 
fact, not only are CO2 emissions almost identical on average, but they also 
produce large quantities of other pollutants linked with thousands of premature 
deaths.Carmakers say they have already taken action to reduce emissions greatly 
in the past decade and regulators are beginning to acknowledge the problem, but 
the challenge remains enormous.The reason is simple: about half of all cars 
currently sold in Europe are diesel powered.As Greg Archer at Brussels-based 
think-tank Transport & Environment says: "The car industry is fighting to keep 
selling diesel because it has invested so heavily in the wrong 
technology".Different realityAir pollution caused by diesel engines is, for 
now, a peculiarly European problem. Of the 70 million cars sold worldwide last 
year, only 10 million were diesel. Three quarters of those were sold in 
Europe.Quite why European carmakers developed diesel in the first place is a 
moot point, but some have argued that as domestic heating systems turned from 
oil to gas, oil companies needed to find an alternative market for their 
mid-range distillate, or diesel fuel.The industry itself points to government 
incentives, such as lower tax rates for companies buying fleets of diesel 
vehicles. "All manufacturers followed this political direction," says the 
European Automobile Manufacturers Association.The Audi A5 (l) meets EU nitrogen 
oxide limits, but the Audi A8 falls well short, one test foundAnd, in theory, 
it was an easy sell - diesel engines are more efficient than petrol engines, so 
running costs are cheaper. Using less fuel should mean lower emissions.In 
practice, however, laboratory measurements of CO2 emissions from diesel and 
petrol engines are the same, according to Martin Adams at the European 
Environment Agency (EEA). And as diesel cars tend to be bigger and heavier, any 
advantages in efficiency are wiped out.As a result, average CO2 emissions from 
diesel cars are only fractionally lower than those from petrol cars, figures 
from the UK's Society of Motor Manufacturers show. The industry counters that 
of course emissions would be greater from larger cars, and maintains that when 
comparing like-for-like models, diesels do emit noticeably less.But carbon 
emissions aren't the main problem when comparing diesel with petrol. So-called 
particulate matter, which causes cancer, and nitrogen oxide and dioxide (NOx) 
are the real concern. Recent studies have shown that nitrogen dioxides (NO2) 
can cause or exacerbate a number of health conditions, such as inflammation of 
the lungs, which can trigger asthma and bronchitis, increased risk of heart 
attacks and strokes, and lower birth weight and smaller head circumference in 
babies.In some European cities, NO2 levels are more than double World Health 
Organization guidelines, with diesel vehicles the single biggest 
contributor.Indeed air pollution as a whole causes more than 400,000 premature 
deaths in Europe, with road transport, and diesel in particular, contributing a 
meaningful chunk.InconsistenciesMost of these deaths are caused by particulate 
matter. Carmakers have recognised this and modern diesel cars are fitted with 
extremely effective filters that stop almost all of this carcinogenic soot 
entering the atmosphere. But there is a "significant problem with tampering 
with filters", according to Mr Archer.So when you see a car belching out thick 
black smoke, the chances are it will be a diesel with a faulty or a missing 
filter.Although a diesel car will fail its MOT if a filter that was originally 
fitted on the vehicle has been removed, there are a number of specialist 
companies which advertise doing just this for drivers who want to improve fuel 
economy and performance. Removing them isn't against the law.These filters also 
perform best when hot, and short trips around town won't heat your engine 
sufficiently. Nor do they help with secondary particulate matter, which is 
formed from NOx, the effects of which are not fully understood.How to reduce 
emissions from your diesel carDon't accelerate unnecessarilyGet your car 
serviced regularlyTurn your engine off if you are stationary for more than one 
minuteStick to the speed limits, especially on the motorwayCheck your car's 
levels of urea (ammonia used to trap NOx)Be very careful buying any retrofit 
solutions - none are fit for purpose according to Transport & 
EnvironmentCarmakers also have a number of technologies to reduce nitrogen 
oxide and dioxide levels. These include catalysts, re-circulating some of the 
exhaust fumes back into the cylinder, and injecting urea, made from ammonia, to 
trap these gases.The problem is they are not being used widely enough and, when 
they are, they don't work as well as they should.As the respected International 
Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT) says, "the technologies for real-world 
clean diesels already exist, but they are not being employed consistently by 
different [carmakers]". Some have speculated it's simply a question of 
cost.Just how ineffective they are is staggering. Tests conducted by the ICCT 
show that modern diesel cars emit on average seven times the EU limit for NOx.A 
separate test showed that some individual cars emit even more - an Audi A8 
emitted 22 times the limit. Only three cars - an Audi A5, a VW Golf and a BMW 
3-series - complied with EU regulations.'Meaningless'The reason carmakers are 
allowed to keep selling these cars is that EU limits are set according to tests 
conducted in a laboratory, where conditions bear little relation to real-world 
driving out on the open road.Actual diesel emissions vs EU 
limits*CarmakerNumber of models testedLowestAverageHighestAudi30.9 times EU 
limit8.2 times EU limit21.9 times EU 
limitBMW70.949.9Citroen33.23.95.4Mazda22.52.93.2Mercedes3344.9Peugeot1333Vauxhall19.59.59.5VW30.72.66.1Volvo12.22.22.2Total230.74.521.9Source:
 Transport & Environment think tank.*NOx emissionsThis extraordinary situation, 
which has effectively rendered current emission limits meaningless, has not 
escaped the attention of the EU. It wants to introduce limits based on 
real-world testing by 2017, but needs the agreement of all member 
states.Carmakers agree real-world tests are needed, but would prefer more time. 
Discussions are ongoing, but the likelihood is that new limits will be higher 
than the current 80mg/km.Given that this limit was first agreed in 2007, we may 
well end up with new limits for harmful diesel emissions that are less 
stringent than those agreed more than a decade earlier - an absurd situation 
that carmakers and policymakers must do more to address.


                                          

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