Ok so i am aware of diesels getting a bad wrap lately, and i just want to know if im possibly buying a diesel van at the worst possible time?
Its got to depend on where you are. But as Granville says, what else is there?
If you are outside these 'hot spots' then I wouldn't worry too much now. I would go ahead and buy your diesel van provided it a recent model with a common rail diesel engine.
As far as London is concerned I don't know how I would be feeling now if I lived and worked there. They haven't differentiated between old diesels and the latest generation ones that are much more environmentally friendly.
What I see is this pollution tax destroying the economy of London center by making services much more expensive.
I personally would have to take a leaf out of the teams decision makers in Formula 1. In changeable conditions they sometimes need to put tyres on that are applicable for that time. I've seen them have to call the car back in a few laps later to change onto a different set of tyres as the weather changed so quickly.
You can't forecast what's going to happen so you can only do what's right for you now. If its wrong in 6 months time its going to be wrong for millions of other motorists as well.
The hatred for diesels is all about tax. If the Government persuades the majority to go back to petrol then we are going to have a new set of issues to contend with. What they have been rather quiet about is petrol emissions especially when they overfuel the engine when cold to try to warm up the catalytic converter more quickly. Every petrol car will be pouring excess pollution into the
atmosphere during the winter because of overfueling. Again its a win situation for them as they are gaining tax on all that waste fuel. Petrol has added Benzene to increase octane rating. Benzene is a know carcinogenic chemical. In other words, its a known for causing cancer.
Someone pointed out that the previous mayor of London, BJ, invested in changing road lanes into bicycle routes restricting cars from entering London even more. So longer journey times = more stop start traffic, more idling engines and more pollution. What about the planes coming in and out of the London airports?
What about the fumes caused by gas heating?
Car drivers account for a small portion of the pollution issue but they are the easy targets for taxation.
And once it catches on this pollution tax will be introduced into every city they possible can as a sure way of replacing the reduced funding lost to central governments cost cutting exercises.
At the moment local Govt has invested in heavily in battery and battery recharging points. They need to recover this and taxing is the only guaranteed way. What they don't seem to grasp is that in time they will just end up killing the goose that lays the golden eggs.
Whilst electric vehicles have their place I don't believe it will take off like government hopes it will. I also doubt that its a solution for heavily laden vans and limited distance is also a negative.
How many of us can afford Teslas?