The Phnom Penh Post

German carmakers ‘colluded’ on emissions: report

- Estelle Peard, Tom Barfield

GERMAN carmakers Volkswagen, Audi, Porsche, BMW and Daimler secretly worked together from the 1990s onwards on issues including polluting emissions from diesel vehicles, news magazine Der Spiegel reported on Friday.

Volkswagen, facing tens of billions of dollars in compensati­on and fines after admitting to cheating on diesel emissions in 2015, had reported the cartel to German competitio­n authoritie­s in a letter seen by the weekly, as did Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler.

“The German car industry agreed in secret working groups about technology in their vehicles, costs, suppliers, markets, strategies and even about the emissions treatment of their diesel vehicles,” the maga- zine reported.

Such cooperatio­n between all of the country’s large car manufactur­ers could have included “behaviour infringing antitrust law”, according to the Volkswagen letter.

A spokesman for Volkswagen – which owns Audi and Porsche – said on Friday that the group would not comment on “speculatio­n and conjecture”.

BMW and Daimler similarly declined to comment.

A spokesman for Germany’s federal competitio­n authority said he could not comment on the Spiegel report.

But he recalled that the authority raided six companies in June 2016 on suspicion of infringing competitio­n law in steel purchases by car manufactur­ers and suppliers.

BMW, Volkswagen and Daimler all acknowledg­ed being raided at the time when contacted by AFP.

However, “presumptio­n of innocence applies until the investigat­ion is over”, the spokesman said.

The cartel depicted in the Spiegel article extends far beyond possible secret agreements on steel prices.

More than 200 employees of the carmakers had formed 60 working groups covering “all areas of car developmen­t, petrol and diesel engines, brakes, transmissi­ons and gearboxes . . . as well as choice of suppliers and prices for parts”, an excerpt of the report read.

According to the magazine, carmakers also held “innumerabl­e meetings” from 2006 onwards about diesel exhaust processing designed to reduce emissions of harmful nitrogen oxides.

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