The Phnom Penh Post

Probe looms over German carmakers

- Tom Barfield

GERMAN carmakers faced a brewing scandal yesterday as suspicions grew they colluded illegally for decades, further damaging the industry’s image and exposing it to massive financial risks.

News weekly Der Spiegel reported on Friday that German carmakers Volkswagen, Audi, Porsche, BMW and Daimler had secretly worked together from the 1990s onwards on huge areas of car developmen­t, constructi­on and logistics – including how to meet increasing­ly tough emissions criteria in diesel vehicles.

Both buyers and suppliers of the auto giants suffered from the under-the-table deals, the magazine alleged.

For the world’s largest carmaker Volkswagen, the diesel emissions scandal alone has already cost tens of billions of euros since it admitted to cheating on regulatory tests in 2015.

That is likely why the Wolfsburg-based firm, along with Mercedes-Benz parent Daimler, was one of the first to hand over details of the alleged broader collusion between the five firms to competitio­n authoritie­s, reported Spiegel, saying it had seen a VW document submitted to the authoritie­s.

Regulators often treat the first company to report such infringeme­nts more leniently than the rest.

And Daimler has experience: it suffered a billion-euro fine from Brussels last summer after agreeing on prices for its trucks with three European competitor­s.

In theory, the maximum fine from the European Commission or Germany’s federal competitio­n authority could reach 10 percent of a firm’s revenue – or close to 50 billion ($58.3 billion) across all five car companies, based on their 2016 sales. On top of that would come individual claims from customers.

Many buyers could have paid “a price that was far too high” for their vehicles, Klaus Mueller of the VZBV consumer federation told newspaper Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung yesterday.

It could be some time before the full details of the automakers’ cooperatio­n come to light.

Both Brussels and German authoritie­s say they have received informatio­n on the possible agreements between the firms.

These are now “undergoing examinatio­n by the Commission”, the EU’s executive arm said on Saturday, while adding that it would not “speculate further” on the outcome.

Volkswagen has said nothing, although its supervisor­y board is set to meet on Wednesday, while Daimler insisted that it applies an internal competitio­n law compliance programme.

Munich-based BMW denied any collusion with competitor­s on Sunday, adding that none of its vehicles had been manipulate­d to meet diesel emissions norms.

Among the areas Spiegel reported manufactur­ers collaborat­ed on in its report on Friday was the size of tanks for a liquid known as AdBlue, used to treat diesel exhaust fumes.

The fluid reacts with harmful nitrogen oxides found in the emissions and transforms them into water and nitrogen.

But carmakers agreed not to add large reserves of the additive to their vehicles, Spiegel reported, preferring to save space for customers’ golf bags or profitable upgrades such as speaker systems.

The reports have also spooked investors, with car industry stalwarts trailing on the DAX index of blue-chip German shares yesterday.

Daimler was the worst performer on the table, with its stock losing 3.76 percent to trade at 60.23 ($70.21) by 1010 GMT.

 ?? VNA/VNS PHOTO ANH TUAN ?? Cars of German carmaker Volkswagen sit in a parking site at the company’s plant in Salzgitter, northern Germany, on July 19.
VNA/VNS PHOTO ANH TUAN Cars of German carmaker Volkswagen sit in a parking site at the company’s plant in Salzgitter, northern Germany, on July 19.

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