I have the printout from mot.
I called the dvla and asked if I could get my cars registered as euro 6 because of the low emissions.
They said they're aware of this "problem" but it would be impossible to update the database for every car in uk, so they stick by the manufacturer rating.
So, as euro 6 didn't exist 12 years ago, we have to scrap cars that are below euro 6 standard and perfectly functioning.
In other words, a scam.
I'm afraid DVLA are being misleading. (In fact, that's putting it politely)! If yours is a 2008 car, it will almost certainly be a "Euro 4" car. VW will tell you exactly what it was built to, if you phone them with your VIN. I'm guessing it won't even have a DPF? (They came in at "Euro 5"). Its emissions will be nowhere near "Euro 6". This is quite a handy guide to the different "Euro" emissions requirements:
https://www.rac.co.uk/drive/advice/emissions/euro-emissions-standards/
A lot of the confusion arises because the MOT requirements are different to the type approval requirements. The type approval requirements (Euro 1, 2, 3, etc) are pretty tough and manufacturers struggle to meet them, even with a car that's new. A full "Euro 6" emissions test will cost about £10k to carry out. The limits are WAY tighter than MOT limits and they also check for far more pollutants.
Given the cost of a full type approval emissions test, and the fact that a 5 year old car would struggle to meet it, never mind a 14 year old one, the MOT test has to be much simpler and cheaper. Therefore, it only checks for two pollutants - carbon monoxide, CO) and unburned hydrocarbons (HC), plus "smoke". The type approval "Euro" test will check for these
plus, oxides of nitrogen and particulates. It could be argued that the MOT test checks particulates, because that's what "smoke" is, but it's the amount that the equipment can pick up that's the difference. If the type approval test is like something that can detect a grain of sand in a bin bag, the MOT test, is struggling to detect a house brick in a bin bag. Also, of course, the MOT test can't check the emissions with the engine under load. The type approval test is done on a rolling road and (thanks to VW!), later versions of Euro 6 are also cross-checked on a real road).
It would cost more than the car was worth to bring it up to Euro 6 requirements. Our big cities have a bad air quality problem, hence the need to try and get the older, more polluting vehicles off the road. Yes, there's a balance to be struck between the environmental damage to destroying a perfectly serviceable vehicle and replacing it with a newer, cleaner one, but in reality, the vehicle won't be destroyed, it will be sold and probably go to work in a rural area where the air quality isn't such a problem because there isn't the traffic density.