NO MORE DIESEL CARS FOR US - VOLKSWAGEN
It’s not a huge
surprise considering the fallout from cheating on diesel emissions tests,
having to spend more than $15-billion in buybacks, compensation to customers,
fines and investing into environmental projects.
Speaking to
Automotive News, Volkswagen Group of America CEO Hinrich Woebcken has confirmed
that Volkswagen won’t relaunch “clean diesels” as a core element of its brand
identity.
For now, diesels will
still be offered from 2017 through 2019, assuming they get approved by
regulators, but the German automaker is re-evaluating how diesels fit in the
U.S. lineup in the future.
This doesn’t mean
that diesels will no longer be offered entirely, as Woebcken confirmed that if
“diesel makes sense as a package to the car,” it will be offered. “But in
reality, we have to accept that the high percentage of diesels that we had
before will not come back again,” he added.
Prior to the
dieselgate scandal, Volkswagen offered a diesel engine in six of its eight
models sold in the U.S. Diesel vehicles also accounted for over 20 percent of
its pre-scandal sales in the U.S., and was the majority of all U.S. diesel car
sales.
Instead, you can
expect to see a focus on crossovers and SUVs along with electrification from
the brand, as it works to change its image in light of recent events.
Even after fixing the
cheating vehicles, Volkswagen’s diesel cars still won’t comply with clear-air
laws.
The German automaker
has reached a $15.3-billion settlement in the U.S., but even after the diesel
cars are recalled and repaired, they will still emit more pollution than
allowed under the emissions standards the company evaded.
To compensate,
Volkswagen will have to contribute billions of dollars to environmental
programs. Clean-air advocates, however, are upset that government negotiators
failed to require repaired vehicles to comply with current standards.
The problem is, a fix
hasn’t even arrived and shows just how difficult it can be to re-engineer a car
after it has been produced and sold.
The company will
invest as much as $10-billion to buy back the affected diesel vehicles and
compensate owners.
Volkswagen will also
have to pay $2.7-billion to federal and California regulators to help fund
pollution-reduction projects, as well as giving $2 billion to be invested in
clean technology.
The California Air
Resources Board (CARB) estimates that once the Volkswagen vehicles are fixed,
they will have their emissions reduced by 80 to 90 percent over current levels.
Regulators, however,
estimate that the cars could still emit as much as 40 times the permitted
amounts of NOx, so even a 90-percent reduction results in more emissions than
current laws allow.
NO MORE DIESEL CARS FOR US - VOLKSWAGEN
Reviewed by deewhyhem
on
Saturday, July 23, 2016
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