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To: elmatador who wrote (4344)1/28/2020 3:45:57 PM
From: Elroy Jetson1 Recommendation

Recommended By
elmatador

  Respond to of 13789
 
The VW diesel cheating scandal has resulted in a big reduction in demand for Bosch diesel components. About 50,000 of the 410,000 jobs at Bosch worldwide are dependent on the diesel industry, reported FAZ. In Germany, the figure is a full 15,000.

This current decline in demand for diesel parts led to 600 job losses in 2019 with another 0.5% cut (roughly 2,000 jobs) expected by 2022.
CEO Volkmar Denner, says Bosche projects 75 percent of all new cars and light commercial vehicles will still be powered by an internal-combustion engine in 2030.

In view of this, Bosch is continuing to invest considerable sums in optimizing gasoline and diesel engines. The company is also using artificial intelligence to further develop internal-combustion engines.

As an example, Bosch is using AI to predictively control exhaust-gas treatment according to patterns drawn from individuals’ driving behavior, as this can further reduce vehicles’ emissions.

Some 3,500 associates in the company’s exhaust-gas treatment and exhaust sensors units generated sales of 2.3 billion euros in 2018. This figure is set to reach 3 billion euros by 2025.



To: elmatador who wrote (4344)1/28/2020 3:55:49 PM
From: Elroy Jetson1 Recommendation

Recommended By
kidl

  Respond to of 13789
 
The automotive industry can do more to prevent global warming than laws require, argues Volkmar Denner, CEO of Bosch - iccwbo.org

Climate action — give us the full picture!Climate change is growing in seriousness, but how serious are we about climate action? Road traffic is one of the factors contributing to the greenhouse effect. It is responsible for 18% of global CO2 emissions.

But a lot of progress has been made here: in Germany, the CO2 emissions of newly registered vehicles have fallen by one quarter since 2007. And it doesn’t stop there: in the European Union (EU), Parliament, Council, and the European Commission will soon be debating whether new vehicles’ CO2 emissions should fall by 30 or 40% over the next decade. That said, limits on road-traffic emissions are only part of the picture. To fulfil them, we need consumption data that are as close to reality as possible.

Moreover, if we continue to ignore the way fuel and electricity are generated, we will not be telling the whole story about road traffic’s carbon footprint. Anyone who takes climate action on our roads seriously must consider all sources of CO2 emissions, from well to wheel. There can be no fight against climate change unless we are perfectly clear about CO2.

When it comes to their carbon footprints, combustion engines and electrical powertrains are not that far apart now, nor will they be in the near future

Climate change – end the lethargy

The ebb and flow of public concern for climate change is difficult to fathom. When the United States announced its withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement a year ago, there was a huge outcry. The criticism from Europe was justified, but it also had a touch of hypocrisy. After all, the German federal government has only just announced it is backing down from its own climate action targets for 2020, fatalistically saying that the targets were unachievable anyway.

Such “remarkable inaction” in the face of a global emergency (to quote the Potsdam climatologist Hans Joachim Schellnhuber) seems to be practically without rhyme or reason. And very recently, the IPCC has said there is an urgent need for unprecedented changes if global warming is to be kept to a maximum of 1.5 degrees Celsius.

How seriously are we taking the available forecasts, such as when the World Bank predicts nearly 140 million climate refugees by 2050? Do we think they’re merely being alarmist? What about the appeals to each one of us not to wait for others – whether legislators or international political bodies — to take action? In my view, the automotive industry can also do more to prevent global warming than our laws require. Above all, it should tackle it much less narrowly than in the past. What I’m appealing for is a fresh look at road traffic CO2 — for the benefit of the environment, and for each individual driver as well.

Limits alone won’t cut it

In other words, I’m not only talking about the new limits the EU will set for the next decade. There’s also the question of what is measured. Two points are important here. The first is to measure real driving consumption, and by real, I mean as close to reality as possible.

The second is to take a well-to-wheel perspective that considers the entire energy chain, from power stations and refineries to the vehicles themselves. We need to focus much more closely on both of these points. Only then will we see where more clearly where action is required in order to improve the carbon footprint of road traffic.

Toward real driving consumption

But how can we bring this about? Or, to put it differently, how can we steer a more realistic course toward efficiency and climate-action targets? The future application of the globally standardized WLTP test cycle is a step in the right direction.

It’s also good that the European Union wants to mandate on-board measurements of new vehicle models’ consumption, and thus also their CO2 emissions, in the next decade. There are still some issues to be resolved, as real consumption values can also fluctuate greatly, depending on factors such as driving style and whether the air-conditioning is on. Nonetheless, it appears that real driving consumption will be the EU benchmark for vehicles’ carbon footprints. This will create more transparency for consumers. Above all, it will allow the cost and benefit of any measure taken to reduce CO2 emissions to be pinpointed more accurately.

The myth of climate-neutral electric vehicles

The more comprehensively we can measure CO2 emissions, the more effective we can be in the fight against climate change. Nobody in favour of climate action can afford to ignore road traffic’s overall carbon footprint. In this respect, Bosch argues for taking a comprehensive view — “well to wheel,” right from the source in other words, instead of merely “tank to wheel.” When it comes to global climate, it is not just a vehicle’s direct emissions that count, but also the emissions from fuel production and electricity generation.

We would like to see this overall footprint included in the next round of CO2 legislation. If it is, drivers of electric vehicles will no longer be able to believe that their vehicles are carbon-neutral – that they emit zero CO2, in other words. If Europe’s current energy mix were to be included in the calculation, a compact electric car would have a carbon footprint of 40 grams per kilometre — and if this is based on Germany’s energy mix, it would be as much as 80 grams.

Tweaking conventional vehicles — and electric ones

When it comes to their carbon footprints, combustion engines and electrical powertrains are not that far apart now, nor will they be in the near future. In other words, this is not a clear-cut choice between combustion engines and electric motors. It’s high time we stopped pitting one against the other. Instead, we have to apply the merits of both, as appropriate.

Specifically, that means ensuring that combustion engines increase their use of lower-CO2 fuels, and that electrical powertrains use more renewable energy.

It may well be that dyed-in-the-wool climate activists would prefer a simpler solution — quite a few of them already believe the combustion engine should be consigned to the dustbin of history. I disagree, and strongly so: the more serious we are about climate action, the less simplistic our arguments have to be.

(Dr. Volkmar Denner, CEO, Bosch)



To: elmatador who wrote (4344)1/28/2020 10:11:57 PM
From: robert b furman2 Recommendations

Recommended By
pak73
SirWalterRalegh

  Respond to of 13789
 
RUT ROH,

Germany not only has tripled their electricity rates by embracing (make that mandating) renewables, now they will kill their auto industry - You know the German Craftsmen that cheated emissions so they could sell filthy polluting diesels.

Angela Merkel will go down as the dumbest leader in generations - put her picture right next to Obama's (he's still waving that magical wand) that Trump has shoved up his ignorant butt. (just a hint - reduce government regulation and let people go to work) - duh.

Bob