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February issue out now!

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FEBRUARY 2025

THE TRUSTED VOICE OF THE NZ AUTO INDUSTRY FOR OVER 40 YEARS

Strong opposition to draft emissions rule

Association worries mandating testing regime will add compliance costs for little environmental gain

T

he government is being urged to reconsider plans to introduce inservice conformity (ISC) testing for light-vehicle imports from certain jurisdictions, with industry experts concerned it will result in unnecessary regulatory burdens. The Motor Industry Association (MIA) has outlined its strong opposition to the move in a submission on the draft Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Exhaust Emissions Amendment (No 2) 2024. Officials suggest inserting a new clause into the rule that states when an approved emissions standard requires ISC testing, the vehicle manufacturer is responsible for conducting such a test. The draft issued by the NZTA adds this testing could be conducted offshore with overseas vehicles when those in our market “belong to the same ISC family or engine family being tested”, and the model being tested is sold and driven on roads in other countries.

A draft rule change suggests imposing in-service conformity testing for some lightvehicle imports

p 16

Spotlight on 2024’s market trends Meet NZTA’s new chief executive p 18

Consultation on changing the rule closed late last month and the prospect of mandating ISC testing has drawn criticism from the MIA. Aimee Wiley, chief executive officer, says the amendment would apply to new models from Europe and the US that meet standards such as UNR 83/08 and US Tier 3. Those vehicles are expected to account for about seven per cent of New Zealand’s overall lightvehicle market.

However, new imports meeting Australian Design Rules (ADRs) and those from Japan – expected to have a 43 per cent market share – will be exempt from ISC testing as will all used light vehicles. Wiley adds introducing ISC testing to New Zealand is an unnecessary burden that “distorts market competitiveness, lacks enforcement feasibility and provides minimal environmental benefit”. [continued on page 4]

p 22 Hybrid signals Corvette’s new era

p 24

Junior Red Bull driver dominates

GLOBAL VEHICLE LOGISTICS NZ - JAPAN - AUSTRALIA - UK - SINGAPORE


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