lucianbr 4 days ago

I could be wrong but I think BMW and Mercedes still make diesel engines. So maybe it's only impossible at a lower price point? Although the difference isn't that large.

4
Symbiote 4 days ago

Using [1], BMW have 87 models, of which 13 can be electric, 13 plug-in hybrid, 47 petrol and just 6 diesel. The six are all SUVs.

Mercedes don't have an easy filter, but they do have some cars available with diesel engines, e.g. C-Class.

Diesel is now down to 9.5% of new cars sold in Europe (Q1 2025), less than full EVs ([2]).

[1] https://www.bmw.co.uk/en/all-models.html

[2] https://www.acea.auto/pc-registrations/new-car-registrations...

lucianbr 4 days ago

There are several 3 series diesel variants sold right now in my country, so maybe we need a bit more data gathering before drawing conclusions.

It does seem like diesel is trending lower, but it's not gone yet, regardless whether you think that is a good thing or not.

In any case, my point was this:

> it would be impossible to create diesel engines which would comply with enviromental standards

is false. Which it is.

Or multiple car manufacturers are still cheating, I guess we must consider the possibility.

lhoff 4 days ago

VW still builds and sells Diesel engines in its Cars. For Volkswagen and Skoda the share of diesel cars was about 30% in Germany. Source (only in German and behind paywall, sorry) https://de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/468422/umfrag...

SoftTalker 4 days ago

They do make them, but they don't sell them in the USA any more. Nobody does.

FridayoLeary 4 days ago

Even VW never stopped selling diesel cars, but they are certainly being phased out everywhere and it's not as popular as it once was.