Report on the last session of the World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations (WP.29)
Documentation
GRPE-68-06
Report to GRPE on the last sessions of WP.29
Report to GRPE on the last sessions of WP.29
Report on items of relevance to GRPE (vehicle pollution and propulsion) from the June 2013 (160th WP.29) and November 2013 (161st WP.29) World Forum sessions.
GRPE-68-17/Rev.1
Updated proposal for the 01 series of amendments to the UN Regulation concerning Retrofit Emission Control devices for heavy duty vehicles
Updated proposal for the 01 series of amendments to the UN Regulation concerning Retrofit Emission Control devices for heavy duty vehicles
Further updated proposal for the second phase amendments to the retrofit emission control devices regulation from the REC informal working group.
GRPE-68-17/Rev.2
Updated proposal for the 01 series of amendments to the UN Regulation concerning Retrofit Emission Control devices for heavy duty vehicles
Updated proposal for the 01 series of amendments to the UN Regulation concerning Retrofit Emission Control devices for heavy duty vehicles
Pursuant to GRPE 68th session discussions, further updated proposal for the second phase amendments to the retrofit emission control devices regulation from the REC informal working group.
WP.29/1104/Add.1
Addendum 1 to the report of the World Forum on its 160th session
Addendum 1 to the report of the World Forum on its 160th session
Annex IV to the meeting report presenting the WP.29 secretariat self-evaluation, including a review of its activities and statistics on the evolution of the WP.29 administrative burden during 2002-2012.
WP.29/2013/127
Request for authorization to develop amendments to GTR No. 2 and new regulations on environmental and propulsion performance requirements for light vehicles (EU)
Request for authorization to develop amendments to GTR No. 2 and new regulations on environmental and propulsion performance requirements for light vehicles
The main objective of this proposal is to establish an amendment to global technical regulation No. 2 on the Worldwide harmonized Motorcycle emissions Certification-test procedure (WMTC) to insert Environmental and Propulsion Performance Requirements (EPPR), currently only applicable for two-wheeled motorcycles. Should an amendment to GTR No. 2 be deemed inappropriate, alternatives including development of a new GTR will be considered.
The objectives also include development of requirements and/or test procedures to create synergies and uniform provisions with related 1958 Agreement UN Regulations, exchange information on current and future regulatory EPPR, e.g. for
“category 3 vehicles” or “L-category vehicles”, minimize differences between these regulatory EPPR, with the view to facilitate the development of light vehicles complying with such internationally harmonized requirements, and to assess coherence with other regulatory requirements and groups activities, such as those on Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedures (WLTP) and on Electric Vehicles and the Environment (EVE).
WP.29/2014/27
Proposal for a new global technical regulation on the Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedure (WLTP)
Proposal for a new global technical regulation on the Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedure (WLTP)
Text of the proposed new GTR on light vehicle emissions and fuel consumption as approved at the November special session of the Working Party on Pollution and Energy and submitted to the Forum for consideration and adoption at its March 2014 session.
WP.29/2014/30
Proposal for the development of amendments to GTR No. [15] on the Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedures (WLTP) (EU and Japan)
Proposal for the development of amendments to GTR No. [15] on the Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedures (WLTP)
Proposal for a further “phase 1b” in the development of the GTR on light vehicle emissions. In order to meet Contracting Party objectives, the draft GTR has been submitted for adoption by the Forum in March 2014. Although the current draft offers a complete test cycle, the WLTP experts want to improve the regulation by further addressing a number of technical elements that were set aside due to time and resource constraints.