Mobility

BiH to ban imports of used cars with Euro 4, new cars with Euro 5 engines from June 1

Photo: Pixabay

Published

April 22, 2019

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

April 22, 2019

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Bosnia and Herzegovina is banning imports of used cars fitted with a Euro 4 engine and new cars with a Euro 5 engine starting from June 1. Once the decision on minimum requirements for imported vehicles takes effect, it will be possible to import used cars only if they meet the Euro 5 emission standard and new ones meeting the Euro 6 standard.

This means it will no longer be possible to import used vehicles older than 10 years into Bosnia and Herzegovina, Blic reported.

The decision was passed by the BiH Ministry of Communications and Transport, based on a request by the association of authorized auto dealers of the Federation of BiH (FBiH).

“The goal is to have better roadworthiness of vehicles, fewer accidents, reduced air pollution and a healthier environment, and more money in budgets, as well as to meet EU accession requirements concerning CO2 emissions,” said the association’s chairman, Haris Muratović.

Muratović said that the decision adopted in 2016 to limit car imports resulted in multiple benefits for the wider community. The average age of imported vehicles was reduced to 8.5 years, while the number of imported preowned cars declined and imported new cars increased.

According to the report, Bosnia and Herzegovina has the oldest car fleet in Europe and the region, with around 80% of registered vehicles older than 10 years.

Temporary zero duty on electric cars proposed

The BiH Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations previously decided to send a decision on the temporary suspension and reduction of import duties on electric and new vehicles to the BiH Council of Ministers for approval. The decision would apply until December 31, 2019.

According to Minister Mirko Šarović, the decision would be temporary and possible to extend if it yields good effects.

The ministry previously said that the proposal on the temporary suspension and temporary reduction of customs duties on imported new cars envisages lowering the customs duty from 15% to 5% on new gasoline- and diesel-engine cars and hybrid vehicles that do not enjoy a preferential status of goods from countries with which Bosnia and Herzegovina has free trade agreements, and from 5% to 0% on electric cars.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

european commission co2 standards new cars vans delay 2027

EU gives European carmakers more time to comply with CO2 standards

02 April 2025 - Transport & Environment says the delay for carmakers proposed by the European Commission must be the final concession

iea report energy 2024 renewables heat ai data centers

IEA’s Global Energy Review: Electricity use is growing rapidly, driven by heatwaves, electrification, data centers, AI

25 March 2025 - Global energy demand grew at a faster-than-average pace in 2024, according to the IEA’s Global Energy Review

serbia kragujevac citroen eC3 stellantis

Another electric vehicle to be produced in Serbia – Citroën e-C3

21 March 2025 - In July last year, automotive giant Stellantis launched trial production of the electric Fiat Grande Panda in Kragujevac

Janom Mirova GreenWay EV charging market EUR 50 million investment round

Janom, Mirova strengthen GreenWay’s position in EV charging market with over EUR 50 million investment round

19 March 2025 - Janom Investments, a leading CEE investor in clean technologies and co-founder of GreenWay, participated in another investment round for the company