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Greenpeace activists hold up signs outside the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, urging Nicolas Sarkozy to reverse the Sarkozy-Merkel car deal. The proposed Franco-German deal would effectively postpone and weaken the long-standing aim of limiting average emissions from cars to 120g CO2/km by another three years.
Enlarge Image[1] In their joint statement at the Ninth Franco-German Council of Ministers in Straubing (Germany) on 9 June 2008, Sarkozy and Merkel said: "Our both countries [sic] support the target 120/130g/km [sic] in 2012 as set by the proposal of the Commission." The Merkozy deal allows emissions of 136-138g, with a further 10g knocked off by "complementary measures" and another 6-8g by "eco-innovations", neither of which are accounted for under EU measures.
[2] Greenhouse gas emission trends and projections in Europe 2007. Tracking progress towards Kyoto targets. EEA, 2007: http://reports.eea.europa.eu/eea_report_2007_5/en
[3] Despite a voluntary commitment (agreed in 1998) to reduce CO2 emissions from new cars to 140g/km by 2008, European car manufacturers only reached an average of 160g/km in 2006.