Fleets across Europe are unlikely to move away from diesel power unless major tax and legislative changes are introduced, according to Chevin Fleet Solutions.

The company, which is a leading provider of fleet management software and operates in more than120 counties around the world, said recent concerns over the accuracy of diesel emissions tests and the effects on air quality of NOx and other pollutants are unlikely to create a shift on their own.

Ashley Sowerby, managing director at Chevin, said: 'Fleets generally want to do the right thing from an environmental point of view but they are also under pressure to balance financial and operational factors.

'The current dominance of diesel has been very much driven by tax regimes and legislation that were designed to place minimising CO2 at the centre of all emissions thinking. 'Unless there are changes to tax and the law ' and quite dramatic changes ' fleets will probably keep favouring diesel because it still provides the best balanced outcome when they come to making fuel choices.'

But Ashley recognised that changes, such as the decision to ban diesel cars from Paris by 2020, could mark the start of a legislation shift away from diesel and ultimately create quite a strong disincentive.

'Similar discussions are under way in the UK and Norway and probably elsewhere. It will take this kind of definite legislative change if fleets are to switch in volume to petrol, hybrids of even electric vehicles.'

However, Ashley added that an intelligent discussion was needed about the latest generation of Euro 6 diesels and whether they should be treated as pariah vehicles in the same way earlier models were now viewed.

'The fact is that if a new diesel car is definitely meeting Euro 6 and there is no question over that fact, then it can credibly be viewed as a relatively sound environmental choice. So we should try to avoid a knee jerk reaction.

'It is by taking a blunt, CO2-centric view of what we want from vehicle emissions that tax and legislative regimes across Europe have ended up inadvertently creating the air quality problems that we are now experiencing.

'Legislators who come up with similarly simplistic anti-diesel policies should take care that they do not throw out the baby with the bathwater. We need a thoughtful approach if we are to avoid making parallel mistakes.'