Skip to main content

Motorcycle type approval deal for Europe

The Members of the European Parliament have now approved the regulation on the approval of two- and three wheelers. This included a number of amendments which have been welcomed by motorcyclists as a compromise. The regulation is setting new rules and technical requirements for manufacturers who sell motorcycles in the European Union. The new rules were intended to improve safety for motorcyclists but in the original form, these would have been expensive to implement and would have resulted in substantial c
November 29, 2012 Read time: 4 mins

The Members of the European Parliament have now approved the regulation on the approval of two- and three wheelers. This included a number of amendments which have been welcomed by motorcyclists as a compromise. The regulation is setting new rules and technical requirements for manufacturers who sell motorcycles in the 1116 European Union. The new rules were intended to improve safety for motorcyclists but in the original form, these would have been expensive to implement and would have resulted in substantial cost increases for motorcycles. The safety benefits themselves are still open to question however and how many lives will be saved remains a mystery, as there has been no clear research suggesting the changes will make anything but a tiny reduction in crashes.

This move follows two years of discussions and the European Parliament has approved the regulation on the approval and market surveillance of two- or three-wheel vehicles and quadricycles. As from 2016 member states of the EU will no longer have the option to restrict the maximum power output of motorcycles to 74 kW. New motorcycles with an engine capacity exceeding 125cm³will have to be equipped with anti-lock braking systems (ABS) while light motorcycles with capacities of 51-125cm³ will have to have at least combined braking systems (CBS). Measures to prevent tampering of the powertrain are going to be installed on all new powered two wheelers with a performance of up to 35kW. The riders organisations represented by 2906 Fema successfully managed to exclude A3 motorcycles and sidecars from these measures. Similarly, special schemes for the approval of individually built motorcycles remain in place which means that the possibility to exempt custom motorcycles from some of the strict measures of this regulation remains.

Emissions limits for motorcycles will become stricter in two stages. FEMA had called for high durability requirements to guarantee that emissions remain on a low level throughout the lifetime of the vehicle. The European Parliament has now decided that manufacturers will need to prove the durability of pollution control devices when driven for at least 35,000km. In order to increase competition and to help especially small and independent workshops manufacturers will have to provide easy and unrestricted access to maintenance and repair information for their products. At the same time access ports to on-board diagnostic systems, whose installation will also be required as from 2016 for new motorcycles, are going to be standardised. 

Contractors worried about public procurement practice in Poland. "We have never ever heard such outspoken criticism about procurement practice and contracting authorities in a single country by so many contractors from so many different enterprises and countries" says Ulrich Paetzold, Director General of FIEC, the 6164 European Construction Industry Federation coming out of a meeting organized in Brussels on 21/11/2012. "And all of these companies have decades of worldwide experience with public procurement and FIDIC standard forms of contract," adds Frank Kehlenbach, Director of EIC, the European International Contractors, on the same occasion, "but this experience does not help them in Poland, given the reluctance of public clients to perform their part of the job."

Contractors active in public works contracts in Poland are profoundly worried about the severe deterioration of public procurement rules and practice over the last years. In fact, for some time already, various changes of both the Public Procurement Law and the internationally recognised FIDIC contract conditions have led to a situation which is being considered as grossly unfair, counter-productive and unacceptable by the contractors.

The combination of poorly prepared tenders, a generally unfair attitude towards contractors and the non-respect of contractual obligations by public clients not only raises the question of professionalism on the demand side but also leads to a number of concerns regarding Internal Market issues, such as lack of transparency and proportionality, as well as discrimination and freedom to provide services. If this development cannot be stopped and reversed, then there is real danger that this inefficiency in spending European funds, will lead the EU to reviewing its funding and lending policies which have provided Poland with almost 68 billion € in the current period and which are in legislative procedures at this very moment.

FIEC and EIC, with its partners in Poland, would like to contribute constructively to avoiding a further deterioration of the situation which would have dramatic consequences not only for Polish contractors, but also for Poland as such, a country whose achievements in the European Union so far have to be applauded.

It is also interesting to note that currently at least 2 billion € are "blocked" by litigation in front of Polish courts and that this amount is rapidly increasing.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The AFB20 (2) Roadside Safety Sub-committee urges more cooperation
    November 17, 2015
    The AFB20 (2) Roadside Safety Sub-committee on International Research Activities calls for closer cooperation between road authorities and the industry On 15 September 2015, the AFB20 (2) Roadside Safety Sub-committee on International Research Activities held its third European workshop in Istanbul, Turkey.
  • IRF Geneva highlights making roads safe: a priority for all
    May 15, 2014
    IRF Geneva’s Susanna Zammataro highlights the importance of the Federation’s ongoing commitment to the work of the United Nations Road Safety Collaboration, with which she serves as co-chair of the project group dedicated to Safer Roads and Mobility On 10th April, the United Nations General Assembly was due to discuss a new global road safety resolution. For those who might dismiss this as just another piece of paper condemned to sit on government shelves and gather dust, this a reminder of a few facts
  • Challenges of NMT in Nairobi, Dar es Salaam
    September 13, 2016
    Developing safety for non-motorised transport in East Africa - Shem Oirere writes. Despite increasing national budgetary allocations for the road sector in recent years, governments in East Africa have made very low investments in non-motorised transport (NMT). This is despite the fact that both Kenya and Uganda have recently passed a policy on pedestrian and cycling safety. In Kenya, the County government of Nairobi, the country’s capital, has embraced a NMT policy, while in Uganda the government has passe
  • EU biofuels strategy ‘criticised’
    July 3, 2012
    A NEW report revealed by the European Commission says that increasing the share of fuel used in transport beyond 5.6% could cause more harm than benefit to the environment. At the end of 2008 the EU agreed to set a target of 10% of transport fuel coming from renewable sources such as biofuels as well as hydrogen and ‘green’ electricity by 2020. The agreement also included a requirement that all new energy sources be sustainable, setting sustainability criteria for biofuels, and is this last point that is p