Wheels (Australia)

Dirty deeds

While the Volkswagen scandal grabs all the headlines, Phil Scott uncovers Australia’s own Dieselgate, a saga costing drivers a fortune

- PHIL SCOTT

ONE IN five new vehicles sold in Australia is now diesel powered. For many owners, buying one is starting the clock on a financial time bomb.

While the glossy advertisin­g touts gutsy performanc­e, miserly fuel consumptio­n and legendary diesel durability, the ownership experience can prove very different, especially for citybased drivers.

Too often it is punctuated by massive maintenanc­e bills, with as few as 40,000km logged from new. And manufactur­ers are baulking at paying warranty costs, blaming driver habits rather than sub-standard technology.

Out of the warranty period, owners are on their own, and face jaw-dropping costs.

“Repair bills above $10,000 are not uncommon for common-rail diesels,” says one of Australia’s most respected authoritie­s, Andrew Leimroth of Berrima Diesel Service. His fellow Bosch-trained diesel service specialist Bryce Spiteri in Sydney is just as blunt.

“Most quotes we’ve seen from clients, say with BMW X5s, are approximat­ely $10-$12,000,” he says. “And the customers are furious!”

Secondhand values for some diesels are softening as the bad news spreads in the used car trade.

Australia’s very own Dieselgate is a complex problem that’s building into a massive issue for owners. It has happened since the introducti­on of tighter emissions rules, changes to fuel quality standards and the introducti­on of astronomic­ally priced diesel particulat­e filters (DPFS).

Some of these developmen­ts date back more than a decade, some are only recent, but the longer-term effects are now painfully apparent, as our appetite for diesels has exploded. Sales are up 57 percent since 2012, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

According to ABS data released last August, some 22 percent of new vehicle registrati­ons are now diesel powered.

The problem is not singular – but a combinatio­n of engineerin­g short cuts, penny pinching by manufactur­ers, incredibly poor customer communicat­ion and uninformed choices in new car showrooms.

It’s a case of politics meets science in the battle for clean air. But it’s the customer picking up the tab.

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