Calgary Herald

As emissions scandal widens, Volkswagen hit by stock selloff and credit downgrade

- DAVID MCHUGH AND GEIR MOULSON

The fallout from Volkswagen’s emissions- cheating scandal intensifie­d Wednesday, as investors dumped the company’s stock and a credit ratings agency downgraded its debt. European regulators demanded VW speed up its investigat­ion into the cheating, while the company halted sales of seven models in the U. S. that allegedly were part of the plot.

The latest developmen­ts followed Volkswagen’s admission Tuesday that it had understate­d the carbon dioxide emissions for 800,000 cars, widening the scope of the scandal.

The company has been unable to halt the flow of bad news since mid- September, when the U. S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency said Volkswagen had installed software on 482,000 cars with small diesel engines that enabled them to cheat on emissions tests for one pollutant, nitrogen oxide. The software reduced emissions when the car was on a test stand. Volkswagen acknowledg­ed that 11 million vehicles worldwide have the software.

On Monday, the EPA charged that Volkswagen also used cheating software in some cars with larger diesel engines, including Volkswagen’s elite Porsche brand. Volkswagen denied the claim, but over the past two days halted sales in the U. S. and Canada of the models involved: the Volkswagen Touareg, Porsche Cayenne, and the Audi A6, A7, A8, Q5 and Q7.

Late Tuesday, VW said it had also found “unexplaine­d inconsiste­ncies” in emissions from some of its vehicles of carbon dioxide, a gas that scientists say contribute­s to global warming.

The cars were sold under the Volkswagen, Audi, SEAT and Skoda brands, most of them in Europe and none in the United States. Involved were 1.4-, 1.6- and 2.0- litre diesel engines and a 1.4- litre gasoline engine with fuel- saving cylinder deactivati­on technology.

The company said the carbon dioxide problem could cost it 2 billion euros ( US$ 2.2 billion), on top of 6.7 billion euros it had already set aside to cover the costs of recalls. Analysts say the total costs in fines and lost sales could be several times that. Amid concerns over the escalating costs, the German carmaker’s ordinary shares slid 9.5 per cent to close at 100.45 euros ( about US$ 109).

The widening scandal also prompted Moody’s Investors Service to cut the rating on the Volkswagen’s debt, which could make borrowing money more expensive for the company. The agency cited “mounting risks to Volkswagen’s reputation and future earnings.”

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