Euro 7 Regulation Deemed a “De Facto Ban” on Fossil-Fuel Vehicles 4 Mar 2021, 14:21 UTC ·
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Fossil fuel is a key component of the modern world. From coal to gas and petroleum, every single one of them has a role in the bigger picture of things. Fossil fuel, however, isn’t much to the liking of legislators from the Old Continent because Europe aims to be climate-neutral by 2050. 30 photos
In preparation for this eco-friendly scenario, the European Commission intends to roll out the Euro 7 regulation for passenger vehicles. Expected to roll out in 2025, the EU-7 standard has been labeled a “de facto ban” on fossil-fuel vehicles by a German trade association by the name of VDMA.
2021 Toyota Corolla Hatchback Review – Cheap Thrills
Chris Davies - Feb 2, 2021, 7:47pm CST
Editors Rating: 8/10
2.0L engine and 6-speed manual can be coaxed into fun
Cabin feels solid and is neatly laid out
Surprisingly high level of standard safety tech
Cons
Rear legroom is poor
You can t have a hybrid hatchback - only the sedan
The Toyota Corolla has been around since 1966, earning a reputation for reliability and restraint for the price-savvy driver, but it’s never really been something you’d choose for a good time. Come the 2021 Corolla Hatchback, though, and the addition of a manual option and a whole new architecture aims to change that, though without straying too far from the hallmarks of Corollas-past.
ENFIELD, CONN.; (PRWEB) January 13, 2021 Gale Toyota is offering a customer cash back deal on select Toyota vehicle models for a limited time only. The
The Globe and Mail Brendan McAleer Published December 16, 2020
Brendan McAleer/The Globe and Mail
Parked next to its great-grandfather, a 1988 Mazda 323 GTX, the 2021 Mazda3 hatchback looks every inch the highly polished machine that it is. Underneath, however, the vehicles share similar components: all-wheel drive, a spacious cargo area and a turbocharged engine.
No, the new Mazda3 Turbo isnʼt the rally hooligan that the limited production GTX was, but this version with its tailgate is a compelling new entrant in one of the most satisfying automotive segments out there: sporty compact hatchbacks. The term “hot hatch” (or warm hatch, depending on how spicy the performance is), first cropped up in Britain in the mid-1980s to describe cars such as the GTX and, retroactively, the Volkswagen GTI.