Over three-quarters of a million vehicles have gone end-of-life
Vehicle history and data expert Cartell.ie and car sales platform CarsIreland.ie have reported today (Wednesday) on the success of the original Waste Management (End-of-Life Vehicles) Regulations 2006, which were replaced in 2014 by the European Union (End-of-Life Vehicles) Regulations 2014.
Since the inception of the end-of-life regime, 775,000 vehicles have been disposed of within the remit of the regulations. This amounts to over one million tonnes of waste – or, to put it another way, 1,000 cars per week disposed.
The current total number of vehicles, up to the end of April 2021, on the Department of Transport National Vehicle and Drivers File (NVDF) which have been registered as end-of-life is 774,729 – up from 772,850 the previous week – an increase of 1,879 over a seven-day-period at the end of April.
An additional 390,876 vehicles have been issued as scrapped on the NVDF, giving a total of over one million vehicles recorded as either end-of-life or scrapped (1,165,605).
The rate of vehicles going end-of-life appears to be increasing. While the average rate of disposal is 1,000 cars per week over the lifetime of the regulations, the total number disposed of in the week considered for the study, the last week of April, was 1,879, and in the last week in March, the total disposed of amounted to 2,013 vehicles – both weeks well above the average.
Jeff Aherne, innovation lead with Cartell.ie, said: “In terms of waste management, these regulations have resulted in the disposal of an estimated one million tonnes of old vehicles. This is a significant amount of waste within the context of environmental protection.
“The other significant thing comes with the reporting of these vehicles as end-of-life, meaning they cannot return to the road – from a road safety perspective this is important. Cartell reports can identify if a vehicle is scrapped or end-of-life just in case unscrupulous individuals try and use a cloned vehicle.”
The regulations were originally enacted pursuant to the provisions of Directive 2000/53/EC of the European Parliament and Council on end-of-life vehicles. As originally stated, the aim of the regulations was to facilitate the achievement of the 85% reuse/recovery with 80% reuse/recycling by average weight per vehicle and year from their commencement and 95% reuse/recovery with 85% reuse/recycling by average weight per vehicle and year by January 1, 2015.
The original 2006 regulations were revoked and updated by the European Union (End-of-Life Vehicles) Regulations 2014.
The regulations were commenced on June 8, 2006, which amounts to 778 weeks between that date and April 30 this year, yielding an average of 996 vehicles per week as 774,729 vehicles went end-of-life during that period.