National Post (National Edition)

VW plots its return to relevance in the U.S.

New SUV, plan for emissions scandal cars

- ERIK SCHELZIG The Associated Press Bloomberg

CHATTANOOG­A, TENN. • Volkswagen AG is rolling out its plan for re-selling most of the cars involved in the German automaker’s diesel-emissions cheating scandal.

Volkswagen brand head Herbert Diess told reporters after a board meeting at VW’s lone U.S. plant in Tennessee on Thursday that the fallout from the scandal “is something we need to live with” as the company seeks to regain relevance and market share in the U.S.

“The brand suffered a lot worldwide, we are suffering still,” he said. “And for sure we are not through.”

It has been more than a year since Volkswagen agreed to pay more than US$20 billion to settle criminal charges and civil claims over the sale of nearly 600,000 cars with “defeat devices” designed to beat U.S. emissions tests.

The first batch of retrofitte­d vehicles includes new 2015 models that went unsold following the cheating revelation­s. Dealers who received diesels as part of VW’s buyback program will get the right of first refusal for those vehicles as they enter the used market, said Hinrich J. Woebcken, head of Volkswagen Group of America.

“After that, there are several channels to remarket them in a controlled way, so they don’t come all at once to the market,” he said. “We want to ensure the residual (resale) values of those cars remain stable.”

Higher-mileage and more heavily used vehicles will be scrapped.

The management meeting in Chattanoog­a comes as Volkswagen ramps up production of the new seven-seat Atlas SUV, the best example of renewed efforts to become a volume brand in the U.S. The goal is to grow market share from below two per cent to more than five per cent, Diess said.

“It’s a long-term plan, we can’t win America over in two years’ time,” Diess said.

To get to five per cent, VW would have to pass Lexus, Mercedes-Benz, Dodge, Ram, Subaru, GMC, Hyundai, Kia “It’s a long-term plan, we can’t win America over in two years’ time,” says Volkswagen brand head Herbert Diess. and Jeep. All of those brands had less than five per cent market share as of July 31.

Volkswagen has confirmed it will introduce an electric version of its iconic microbus in 2022, but no decision has been made about where to build it. VW minibuses haven’t been sold in the U.S. since the 1970s, but a prototype of the new version was met with great excitement when Diess showed it off in California last month.

“We have a beautiful heritage with ups and downs, and we have the dreadful history now of the past two years, which was a very difficult period for us,” Diess said. “But we think that we get a second chance from the American customers.”

Any additional U.S. production beyond the Atlas and the Passat sedan would be accommodat­ed at the plant in Chattanoog­a.

“We wouldn’t need a new plant,” he said. “This plant still has a lot of capacity, and we want to fill that.”

Volkwagen’s U.S. plans don’t include a pickup truck.

“It would be a very risky move, because American players are so strong,” he said. “We would have to invent something really special, and it’s not really Volkswagen’s heritage.”

Volkswagen’s plans involve giving more flexibilit­y to the North American region to tailor vehicles to local demands. Matthias Erb, the chief engineerin­g officer for Volkswagen’s North American region, said one example of the new approach was the local decision to call the new SUV the Atlas in North America — it is sold under the Teramont name in other markets.

“We renamed it,” he said. “Five years ago, we would have been fired.” defective enough.

As part of Friday’s settlement, Honda will create a fund of almost US$200 million to expand its efforts to reach owners who haven’t responded to recall notices, or who haven’t been located.

The total negotiated value of Friday’s settlement was US$605 million, but the plaintiffs agreed to a 20-percent discount in Honda’s out-of-pocket expenses in view of its prior efforts to repair affected vehicles and provide loaner cars, spokesman Chris Martin said.

The plaintiffs will continue to press similar claims against Ford Motor Co. and other automakers, lead counsel Peter Prieto said in a statement.

Friday’s settlement must be approved by a judge in Miami and doesn’t cover personal injury claims related to faulty Takata airbags. air bags quickly

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