China will need all light automobiles to abide by harder new “China VI” emission standards by the middle of 2020, as per a notice released by environment regulators on Friday.
The Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP) informed all sales and registrations of light automobiles will need to abide by the new standards – which are based upon ones used in Europe and the United States – from July 1, 2020.
Cars will have to enhance the catalytic converters, fuel injection and the base of the engine’s combustion chamber in order to satisfy the new standards, the ministry stated.
All automobiles on China’s roads are required to fulfill the previous China V emission standard by next year.
Northern China was swallowed up in heavy smog recently, requiring as many as 24 cities to issue red alerts, shut down factories and cut the variety of automobiles on the road.
As per a 2014 research study by Beijing’s environmental management bureau, auto emissions was accountable for over 30 percent of the city’s concentrations of little, breathable particles called PM2.5.
The MEP stated the execution of progressively stronger fuel requirements since 2001 had decreased toxins per car unit by over 90 percent.
The 34.6 million tonnes of carbon monoxide caused by autos in 2015 totaled to 86.9 percent of overall emissions of the gas, another smog element which is poisonous to human beings, stated Liu Bingjiang, head of the MEP’s Department of Atmospheric Environmental Management.
While China had been the world’s biggest automobile manufacturer since 2009, its technology remained lower than advanced worldwide levels, and embracing harder fuel standards would also help domestic manufacturers raise their competitiveness, Liu added.