Isolated car manufacturers? the political positions of the automotive industry on the real driving emissions regulation
Langue
EN
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
International Journal of Automotive Technology and Management. 2018, vol. 18, n° 2, p. 119-141
Résumé
The real driving emissions regulation will have several critical consequences for the European diesel market. The catalyst technologies needed to comply are costly, both for car manufacturers and for consumers, and are ...Lire la suite >
The real driving emissions regulation will have several critical consequences for the European diesel market. The catalyst technologies needed to comply are costly, both for car manufacturers and for consumers, and are difficulty to implement in diesel small cars. However, the automotive firms are stakeholders in the political negotiations in the European Union. To tackle this apparent contradiction, we study the corporate stakeholders' positions on the real driving emissions regulation through the analysis of the hearings held at the European Parliament between 2016 and 2017. After describing the catalysts value chains and the European governance of the air pollutants standards, we highlight the differences between firms' representatives' positions through the lens of the dependence of actors to diesel market and embeddedness of the air pollutant regulations in the broader European policy. We conclude that stakeholders ask both for a tightening of standards and policies to support diesel or new energies engines markets. That leads to general considerations about the capture phenomenon in a theoretical meso-institutional framework.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
Europe
Air pollution control
Air pollution regulation
Air quality
Automobile manufacture
Automotive industry
Car manufacturers
Catalysts
Catalytic converters
Chains
Commerce
Diesel
Diesel engines
Unités de recherche