| >The US auto lobby was the reason the US NOx diesel emission requirements are more stringent than EU in the first place No, that was a result of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 for the reduction of acid rain. Though it was targeted towards industrial emissions of SO2 & NOx, but stricter regulation for vehicles were an additional effect. >specifically disadvantaging European diesel cars That's a weird argument given that diesel passenger vehicles in the US are held to the same standard as gasoline ones, but to a separate standard from their petrol counterparts in the EU. I mean, one could argue the opposite, that an EU emissions policy favorable to diesels amounted to an equivalent 13-16% import tariff. [1]
Several domestic rather than just foreign diesel engine manufacturers were also penalized for using defeat devices in 1998.[2] > (which are much cleaner overall) That's quite arguable, trading lower CO2 & CO for increased NOx & PM. [1]: http://www.eugeniomiravete.com/papers/MMT-Diesel.pdf [2]: http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1998-10-23/news/981023011... |
Surely car manufacturers didn't have a say, which is why US and EU emission standards look like this https://longtailpipe.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/us-europ... .
>same standard as gasoline ones
Well duh, let's keep diesel cars to petrol standards so that their benefits don't matter and their disadvantages are prohibitive!