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Motorists should hesitate before getting a diesel car to make sure they buy 'least polluting vehicle', Chris Grayling says

Motorists should hesitate before buying a diesel car to make sure they go for the "least polluting vehicle they can", the Transport Secretary has said. 

Chris Grayling urged drivers to take a "long, hard think" before buying a vehicle, especially if they live in urban areas. 

Speaking to the Daily Mail, he did not go as far to claim that diesel vehicles were going to disappear.

People should take a long, hard think about what they need

Chris Grayling, Transport Secretary

But he did say: "People should take a long, hard think about what they need - about where they are going to be driving - and should make best endeavours to buy the least polluting vehicle they can. 

"I don't think diesel is going to disappear but someone who is buying a car to drive around a busy city may think about buying a low-emission vehicle rather than a diesel." 

His comments come after the Daily Telegraph learnt earlier this month that scrappage schemes for diesel cars could be introduced as early as this summer, as part of plans to lower emissions and improve air quality across the country

The reported scheme would see drivers offered a cash incentive for replacing an old diesel car with a low-emission vehicle.

It also came as the AA warned soaring petrol bills were ruining family life, with middle-class households having to reduce the number of times they visit relations or take family trips. 

Last night, sources from the Department for Transport told the Mail that Mr Grayling was only urging motorists to consider whether a less-polluting vehicle could suit their needs. 

Concern over the impact of diesel cars on nitrogen dioxide (NO2) levels were raised by the Volkswagen emissions scandal in September 2015.

It emerged 11 million Volkswagen diesel vehicles around the world had been fitted with software to release fewer smog-causing pollutants during tests than in real-world driving conditions.

Analysis by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) found NO2 is estimated to be responsible for 23,500 deaths in the UK each year.

Government advisory panel the Committee on Climate Change believes 9% of new car sales should be electric by 2020 for the UK to meet its legal obligation to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2050 compared with 1990 levels.

In 2016 the market share of new car sales for alternatively fuelled vehicles was 3.3%, up from 2.8% the previous year.

In June last year then-transport secretary Patrick McLoughlin said it had been a mistake for former Labour chancellor Gordon Brown to slash taxes on diesel.

Mr Brown reduced duty on low-sulphur fuel in 2001, which contributed to an increase in annual diesel car registrations from 3.45 million to 8.2 million.

A Government report published in April 2016 showed that diesel cars being sold in the UK emit an average of six times more nitrogen oxide in real-world driving than the legal limit used in official tests.

The Department for Transport investigation found all of the 37 top-selling diesel cars tested exceed the legal limit required for laboratory tests when driven for 90 minutes on normal roads.

Ministers insisted no laws had been broken by the manufacturers as cars are only required to meet the lab test regulations.

A scrappage scheme to boost the motor industry ran from May 2009 until March 2010, offering motorists £2,000 to scrap an old car for a new model.