Volkswagen cooks up fix for Passat woes
There’s good news for some of the 84,000 owners who want to keep their cars
U.S. and California regulators approved a fix for more Volkswagen cars caught up in the company’s emissions cheating scandal, giving their owners an option to keep the vehicles instead of having the automaker buy them back.
The modification to bring the vehicles into compliance with U.S. emissions standards applies to about 84,000 Passats with automatic transmissions from the 2012 to 2014 model years, according to Volkswagen. Regulators previously approved a fix for another 67,000 VWs with 2.0-litre TDI engines.
“Today’s approval is another important step in efforts to repair the environmental harm caused by these vehicles,” said Richard Corey, executive officer of the California Air Resources Board (CARB).
The automaker has acknowledged that the vehicles were programmed to turn on emissions controls during government lab tests and turn them off while on the road. The EPA alleged the scheme let the cars spew up to 40 times the allowable limit of nitrogen oxide, which can cause respiratory problems in humans. The affected vehicles fall into two classes: vehicles with 2.0-litre four-cylinder diesel engines, and others with 3.0-L V6 TDI engines.
The company reached a deal worth up to $15 billion for 475,000 four-cylinder diesel cars that offered owners the option of repairs, or a buyback and additional compensation of US$5,100 to US$10,000 each.
Regulators are evaluating a possible fix for another 49,000 of these vehicles, according to CARB.
A federal judge in San Francisco signed off on a separate, US$1.2-billion deal with owners of 88,500 Volkswagens with diesel V6 engines rigged to cheat on emissions tests.
Volkswagen is offering buybacks to some of those owners, but believes it can repair newer models.