Skip to main content

Emissions challenge for engine manufacturers

The German construction equipment manufacturer's association, the VDMA, has said that the new EU-exhaust emission directive presents a major challenge for its members. According to the VDMA, the introduction of the EU-Exhaust Emission Regulation Stage IIIB has resulted in a great deal of investment at huge cost. For customers that has resulted in higher prices and the VDMA sees tighter regulation as being counter-productive.
February 29, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Komatsu Europe's store of engines is ready for the new emissions regulations

The German construction equipment manufacturer's association, the VDMA, has said that the new EU-exhaust emission directive presents a major challenge for its members.

According to the 1331 VDMA, the introduction of the EU-Exhaust Emission Regulation Stage IIIB has resulted in a great deal of investment at huge cost. For customers that has resulted in higher prices and the VDMA sees tighter regulation as being counter-productive.

Various manufacturers have commented on the cost of meeting the new regulations.

Dr Günter Hähn, executive director in charge of the 364 Wirtgen Group's Technical Division said, "We have to adapt our machines. That costs a lot of money." The exhaust emission regulations have been in force in Europe and the USA since beginning of this year. Hähn estimates that approximately from one third up to half of all development capacities within the group have been taken up by meeting emissions targets and the costs are enormous.

This is not restricted to Wirtgen and the situation is the same for all manufacturers of construction machinery throughout Europe and the USA.

Thomas Weber, managing director 2394 Volvo Construction Equipment Germany said, "We have had to completely change the design of our large wheel loaders." According to Weber, the development costs are very high in this area. What Weber would like to see is a "...realistic comparison of costs and benefit and the resulting practically-orientated solutions".

The relation must be right, he said. Weber pointed out that of the products which are also supplied by Volvo, each year a total of only around 30,000 new vehicles come on to the German market. Compared to the registrations of new cars and vans, this represents an extremely small figure. He also said that the total pollution level accounted for by construction machinery was correspondingly low.

Producers that sell their products not only in Europe and the USA, but also in other countries, are especially hard-hit by the new exhaust emissions regulations. Because the provisions do not apply in those countries, there is no low-sulphur diesel fuel to power these machines, and of course as no one is prepared to pay the higher prices, they must now build two variations of the same machines at their plants, one for the European and US market and the other for the rest of the world.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New axle joint venture for LiuGong and ZF
    September 12, 2012
    LiuGong and ZF are intensifying their cooperation by building a new joint venture axle company in Liuzhou. China’s construction equipment manufacturer, LiuGong and German drivetrain specialist ZF-Group established a joint venture called ZF Liuzhou Axle. The new company will produce wheel loader axles that are specially tailored for the requirements of the Chinese market. In the long run some 190 employees will be working at Liuzhou Axle Co. Ltd. and more than 30,000 of the newly designed axles will be deliv
  • Volvo CE is further developing its presence in road construction
    October 3, 2014
    The road business has benefited from fairly constant levels of trading in recent years and even during the downturn, construction operations only fell by a comparatively small quantity during the downturn. Darren Fitch, director for road machinery for the EMEA region within Volvo CE said, “The road construction sector has been far less cyclical than other construction markets.” The global market for road machinery is healthy at present and he said, “We’re having a good year.”
  • VDMA optimistic for machine sales
    July 16, 2015
    The VDMA is the German equipment manufacturing association and says it is optimistic with regard to machine demand. The VDMA’s latest forecast for the construction equipment business segment in 2015 suggests market growth of 4%. According to the VDMA, the bauma 2016 construction equipment event in Munich in spring 2016 will also provide strong impetus for machine sales. German construction equipment manufacturers are more optimistic at the middle of the year than they were at the beginning – "even though u
  • Tough CO2 targets for Europe’s car manufacturers
    July 12, 2012
    Following the adoption yesterday of the European Commission's proposals to reduce CO2 emissions from cars and vans, the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association (ACEA) says it will now work with its members to conduct a full analysis of how the proposed targets should be reached as well as their feasibility, and what this means in practice for the industry as a whole. The auto industry shares concerns about global warming and is contributing actively to find sustainable solutions. In 2011, the average