October 3, 2015
UPDATED: Volkswagen Caught Cheating on Emissions
UPDATE 3: Volkswagen Philippines issued a statement (10/03).
UPDATE 2: The Dieselgate scandal has caused some heads to roll (9/26).
UPDATE 1: More information provided below. Seems the cheat involves engines worldwide (9/23).
Volkswagen is the middle of a corporate catastrophe that undermines a loss of trust towards consumers and government regulators. Just last week, the US-based Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has discovered that certain VW models are able to circumvent emission requirements during testing with a “defeat device”. This affects close to 500,000 cars and could also mean that the German automaker could face stiff fines.
This all started when a non-government organization, the International Council on Clean Transportation noticed discrepancies between tests of diesel Volkswagens in Europe and in the US. Wanting to verify VW’s “clean diesel” claim, they borrowed equipment from the West Virginia University to test emissions in real-world driving conditions. While the VW models pass the laboratory tests performed by the California Air Resources Board (CARB), they failed the real-world test, which measures tailpipe emissions.
With VW engineers unable to explain the discrepancies, the EPA and CARB launched an investigation. It was only when regulators threatened to withhold certifications and halt sales did Volkswagen fess up to using a cheat device.
In order to meet tougher emissions regulations, carmakers are now increasingly reliant on diesels that use urea-based additives to cut down Nitrogen Oxide or NOx emissions. However, VW touted that its 2.0-liter TDI can meet these regulations without the need for the costly urea injection system. This includes: 2009-2015 TDI Golf, Jetta, Beetle, and the Audi A3 as well as 2014-2015 Passat.
Instead, the EPA discovered that these cars contain a sophisticated software algorithm which detects when a car is being tested for emissions. When this happens, the software triggers a change in engine management that cuts down emissions dramatically. During normal driving situations, affected VW models could have up to 40 times the legal limit of NOx.
NOx is a contributor to smog and can cause a wide range of health problems for people including asthma attacks and respiratory illness. It’s also linked to respiratory-related or cardiovascular-related diseases especially to the children and the elderly.
Consumer Reports says that the computer software in affected VW models could detect when a car is put on a dyno basically because the front wheels spin on a rolling road and the rear wheels remain stationary. Normally, this should trigger safety features such as the stability or traction control. To prevent the driver aids from kicking in, testers put the car into a dedicated “test” mode to complete the procedure without stability or traction control interfering.
Although no recall has been made as of yet, Volkswagen USA has already issued a stop-sale on all remaining 2015 models using the 2.0 TDI engine in the US. Meanwhile, the EPA says they’re withheld the 2016 “certificate of conformity” meaning VW cannot sell cars with this particular powertrain configuration to the public. Currently though, VW stands to lose out 20-25 percent of its US sales volume. Furthermore, they can be slapped with a huge fine amounting to about US $18-billion.
Volkswagen USA President and CEO, Michael Horn publicly apologized at launch of the all-new 2016 Passat and says his company will cooperate with authorities.
In the long run though, Volkswagen may face a loss of trust with this so-called emissions cheating. Just today, the company has lost some 20 percent of its stock value and European regulators now want to open their own investigation on possible emissions violations of the brand. It can also drag and tarnish the reputation of VW’s other brands including Audi and Porsche that use the same TDI engine.
UPDATE 1: Volkswagen has just revealed that this emissions by-pass code is present in all models equipped with the Type EA 189 common rail diesel engine.
This is the company’s most widely used motor and is present in models from Volkswagen, Audi, to even Seat and Skoda. This affects 11 million vehicles globally. They are now coordinating with authorities and the German Federal Motor Transport Authority. The company has also set aside 6.5-billion Euro that the company may need to pay off either regulatory, individual, or class-action lawsuits.
They have clarified however that engines that are certified Euro 6 do comply with all legal requirements and environmental standards.
On a separate note, the EPA and CARB have now started to investigate the 3.0 V6 TDI used in several Volkswagen, Audi, and Porsche models in the US as well.
Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn has issued a public apology about the incident.
UPDATE 2: Martin Winterkorn has stepped down as Volkswagen CEO. Replacing him is Porsche CEO Matthias Müller. Mr. Müller will continue on with this function until a replacement is found.
UPDATE 3: Volkswagen Philippines has issued an official statement saying that all vehicles distributed and sold in the Philippines are not affected by the particular software used in diesel engines. See the full statement below:
Statement from Volkswagen Philippines on Emissions Situation
Volkswagen Philippines has just received official information from Volkswagen AG that all vehicles distributed and sold by Volkswagen Philippines are not affected by the particular software used in diesel engines.
We at Volkswagen Philippines sincerely apologize to all our customers for the undue stress and inconvenience this issue may have caused.
All vehicles distributed and sold by Volkswagen Philippines comply with Philippine emissions regulations and standards.
Volkswagen Philippines highly appreciates the continued trust and confidence provided by the Filipino consumers to the Volkswagen brand.
Goodbye VW! Though I believe most car companies are into some fraud one way or another... as Pinoys would put it: "its not illegal; just dont get yourself caught..."
ReplyDeleteWhat a big mess VW got into. How about they just dump all these TDI models that couldn't be sold in the US to Asian markets? Most Asian markets are not too strict with emissions control and has high regard for diesel-powered cars. Like maybe big discounts for such cars to recoup the losses for all the fines they will be paying up for.
ReplyDeleteGood idea! That way us Pinoys will greatly benefit from the mistake of the USA VW. They just better make sure that their pricing will also be competitive and offering huge discounts. The current prices of the VW models here are unjustifiable since some of the models are outdated.
DeleteDoes it mean their luxury lines (Bentley,Lambo, Bugatti, Audi, Porsche, etc...) might also have cheated?
ReplyDeleteAnother reason why diesel sucks. It'll never be as clean as gasoline. Boycott diesels, save the environment. Bayan o sarili?
ReplyDeleteDo you even know what you're talking about or are you just basing it on hearsay? Bayan o sarili? Then don't buy a car. Buy what you need and donate everything else. Dumbass
Deleteoh no dont tell me the pope mobile is a sinner and hey we got those software installed in our picos machine its called win-lose dadagbawas app and will be updated on 2016
ReplyDeletewho cares vw products will still be expensive and over priced and they will still be cleaner than that of our usual brands and its not the first time a German lied to the world, i just cant wait for their fancy term for recalls, maybe "truth re-calibration" or "we got caught dirty assholes" or "black smoke pretending to be arrian" and my advise to vw do what david hasselhoff would do get stinking drunk do a humiliating thing and post it in the internet, then all is forgiven
ReplyDeleteyou have some kind of deep hatred for the Germans? why the angst?
DeleteHappy October fest!!!!! now there's a reason to get drunk!!!!!
ReplyDeleteMad of VW? How do you feel towards our Jeepneys that keep passing emission tests every year just because the emission testing shops just take a photo of a testing stick in the tailpipe and manually input the result??
ReplyDeleteThere's a difference. Lowlifes like the LTO, emission testers, and jeepney drivers are to be expected of doing dishonest work. But for VW, a well-known GERMAN car company whom many have trusted over the years, to do such an act is awful.
Deletei would have to agree with you sir, if our president make up stories in fantasy world and our senators lie 110% of the time then its an ordinary day but being an institution like VW trusted world wide then this is a scandal
DeleteLet's vote Duterte para mawala na mga kupal sa lipunan..
DeleteQuestion is, are there any Volkswagen Group cars using this engine aside from the Volkswagen brand?
ReplyDeleteVolkswagen owns: Audi, Bentley, Bugatti, Lamborghini, Porsche, and overseas-brands SEAT and Skoda.
not sure if they use the exact same 2.0 and 3.0 tdi engines, but:
ReplyDelete2.0 tdi
vw jetta, touran, tiguan
audi a3, a4, a6, q3, q5
3.0 tdi
vw touareg
audi a6, a8
porsche macan, panamera, cayenne
now that is a real mess....
DeleteWhat a mess indeed.....
Deletei feel for the people who bought VW products they paid for their cars now they have to endure their love and joy cut into half, prices will surely plummet both new and used cars, dont get me wrong i will still buy them if i could but i expect lower prices much much lower lower prices
ReplyDeleteAyala! Babaan nyo na prices ng VWs nyo or else wala nang bibili nyan!
ReplyDeleteCheaters never win and Winners never cheat.
ReplyDeleteQuitters always lose and Losers always quit.
DeleteHard to see, the dark side is
DeleteAlways with you what cannot be done
Named must your fear be before banish it you can
Go into exile I must...failed I have
Around the suvivors, a perimeter create
Death is a natural part of life. Rejoice for those around you who transform into the Force. Mourn them do not. Miss them do not. Attachment leads to jealously. The shadow of greed, that is.
Why are you speaking like Yoda??
DeleteBut China did!
Deleteno his a very very sad vw sales agent
ReplyDeleteDo you know there are also Volkswagen Emissions Lawsuit to face civil prosecution, fines & other legal action. Thanks for sharing. Keep exploring.
ReplyDelete