CNET'S QUICK GUIDE: The state of diesel
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Diesel-powered passenger vehicles
2005 models: These vehicles are not available in California, Maine, Massachusetts, New York, and Vermont.
Future vehicles: Dates in parentheses are the expected launch year at the time of this writing.
Audi Q7 SUV (2007) Mercedes-Benz M-Class ('06 or '07) Mercedes-Benz G-Class Mercedes-Benz R-Class Volkswagen Touareg (2006)
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![]() The 1936 Mercedes-Benz 260D was the first diesel passenger car.
The idea of powering a diesel engine with an environmentally friendly fuel has returned, however. Today, biodiesel, which is derived from vegetable oil, is used quite widely in Europe and is gaining popularity in the United States.
Diesels represent a smaller portion of the U.S. market because fewer diesel models are offered here. The more stringent federal emissions standards, combined with the fact that five states (California, Maine, Massachusetts, New York, and Vermont) won't allow the sale of any diesel-powered passenger vehicles, mean many automakers have opted to stay out of the U.S. diesel game entirely. (Diesel-powered trucks, such as the heavy-duty versions of the Chevy Silverado, Dodge Ram, and Ford F-Series, fall under different emissions rules.) The state-by-state decision began with California, which enacted emissions standards that were more stringent than federal standards because of air pollution problems. As the states in the Northeast realized they had serious pollution issues as well, they adopted the California standards. |
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