Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
International

VW Scandal Widens, Hitting Shares, As Carmaker Says Other Kinds Of Emissions Also Understated

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Nov, 2015 10:45 AM
    FRANKFURT — Investors and regulators put more pressure on Volkswagen on Wednesday after the company said it had understated the carbon dioxide emissions for 800,000 cars, widening its scandal over cheating on U.S. engine tests.
     
    Amid concerns over the escalating cost of the crisis, the German carmaker's ordinary shares slid 8.4 per cent to 101.70 euros in late afternoon trading in Europe.
     
    The company has been unable halt the flow of bad news since the scandal broke Sept. 18, when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said Volkswagen had installed software on 482,000 cars that enabled them to cheat on emissions tests for one pollutant, nitrogen oxide. The software reduced emissions when the car was on a test stand. Up to 11 million Volkswagen vehicles worldwide have the software.
     
    The carmaker said late Tuesday it had also found "unexplained inconsistencies" in emissions from some of its vehicles of carbon dioxide, a gas that scientists say contributes to global warming.
     
    The cars were sold under the Volkswagen, Audi, SEAT and Skoda brands, most of them in Europe and none in the United States. Involved were 1.4-, 1.6- and 2.0-litre diesel engines and a 1.4-litre gasoline engine with fuel-saving cylinder deactivation technology.
     
    The company said the carbon dioxide problem could cost it 2 billion euros ($2.2 billion), on top of 6.7 billion euros it had already set aside to cover the costs of recalls. Analysts say the total costs in fines and lost sales could be several times that.
     
    The EU's executive commission told Volkswagen to speed up its investigation.
     
    "Public trust is at stake here," spokeswoman Lucia Caudet told reporters on Wednesday. "We need all the facts on the table."
     
    The Commission has enforcement powers to ensure that manufacturers respect their obligations in terms of carbon dioxide emissions, including the possibility of imposing fines.
     
    Germany's transport minister indicated that VW will be on the hook for the costs of higher car taxes following the revelation that carbon dioxide emissions were understated.
     
     
    Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt noted that Germany's car tax is calculated on the basis of engine size and carbon dioxide emissions, and so "if these vehicles emit more CO2, over and above the respective limit, that makes a new calculation necessary."
     
    "I assume that a solution will be found that doesn't burden VW customers," Dobrindt said. "I think that VW clearly has a duty and a responsibility to ensure that, regarding these questions, customers face neither extra costs nor effort."
     
    Dobrindt said of the 800,000 vehicles found to have excessive CO2 emissions, 98,000 had gasoline engines. So far, the scandal had only affected diesel engines.
     
    "Both the actions that led to these results and the results themselves are unacceptable," Dobrindt told lawmakers. "And so Volkswagen clearly bears the responsibility and the duty to remedy the damage that has resulted, particularly for customers."
     
    "If they want to win back trust, they must first ensure that the damage is remedied and the customers don't get stuck with the problem," he said.
     
    The latest revelation follows U.S. allegations that the cheating software was also found in some cars with larger engines, including Volkswagen's elite Porsche brand.
     
    CEO Matthias Mueller has promised the company will "relentlessly and completely clarify the matter." He has said the company must re-examine its corporate culture to prevent such missteps from occurring again.
     
    The news that Porsche vehicles might also have had the deceptive software is a potential embarrassment for Mueller, who headed Porsche before he became CEO.
     
    Mueller has said that upper management would not have involved itself in the details of software development and has pointed to "a few" employees who altered the software code. The company has hired law firm Jones Day to investigate.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Modi meets Malaysian PM

    Modi meets Malaysian PM
    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi Wednesday met Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak as he began day two of his engagements in the Myanmar capital....

    Modi meets Malaysian PM

    Valerie Hernandez crowned Miss International 2014

    The beauty pageant's 54th annual event, which was held at the Grand Prince Hotel Takanawa, had 73 entrants from all over the world between the age of 19 and 26....

    Valerie Hernandez crowned Miss International 2014

    Truck Flips, Spills About 25,000 Pounds Of Frozen Boxed Turkeys On Northern California Highway

    Truck Flips, Spills About 25,000 Pounds Of Frozen Boxed Turkeys On Northern California Highway
    SAN RAMON, Calif. — A tractor-trailer has overturned and spilled about 25,000 pounds of frozen boxed turkeys on a Northern California freeway two weeks before Thanksgiving.

    Truck Flips, Spills About 25,000 Pounds Of Frozen Boxed Turkeys On Northern California Highway

    After Criticism, White House Turns To Girls Of Color After Focusing On Boys

    After Criticism, White House Turns To Girls Of Color After Focusing On Boys
    WASHINGTON — The White House is planning to focus on improving the lives of girls and women of colour, after months of complaints that they were left out of the "My Brother's Keeper" initiative for young men.

    After Criticism, White House Turns To Girls Of Color After Focusing On Boys

    US opens Ebola response hospital in Liberia

    US opens Ebola response hospital in Liberia
    A 25-bed hospital, part of the US Defense Department's Ebola response efforts, has officially opened in Liberia, the department's spokesman Steven Warren said Monday....

    US opens Ebola response hospital in Liberia

    Key IS leader spotted in Syrian city after US airstrike

    Key IS leader spotted in Syrian city after US airstrike
    A key Islamic State (IS) leader, Abu Anas al-Shamy, was seen moving about publicly in the Syrian city of Al-Bukamal, on the border with Iraq, the Syrian...

    Key IS leader spotted in Syrian city after US airstrike