Waterloo Region Record

Ontario raids Volkswagen offices over emissions

- Dan Healing The Canadian Press

The federal government should be moving ahead with action against Volkswagen in the wake of news that Ontario has charged the company and carried out a raid on its headquarte­rs, according to an environmen­tal organizati­on.

On Tuesday, provincial authoritie­s executed a search warrant at Volkswagen Canada offices in the Toronto area as part of its investigat­ion into the emissions scandal that rocked the company two years ago.

The Ministry of the Environmen­t and Climate Change said Wednesday it had charged Volkswagen AG with one count under the province’s Environmen­tal Protection Act last week, alleging the German company did not comply with Ontario emission standards. The allegation­s have not been tested in court.

“It’s good news, finally. Now if we could just get Environmen­t Canada to act on behalf of the country, that would be a great thing,” said Tim Gray, executive director of Environmen­tal Defence.

He said the federal government has broader powers than the province and can impose higher fines on offenders that could be used to protect against pollution and accelerate the transition to electric vehicles.

His organizati­on and the Canadian Associatio­n of Physicians for the Environmen­t filed suit over the summer to try to force Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna to move forward on enforcing Canadian pollution laws allegedly broken by Volkswagen.

A statement from McKenna at the time said her department is investigat­ing and will act if necessary.

The department did not immediatel­y respond Wednesday to a request for an update.

The Ontario government said the search warrant was part of its continuing investigat­ion.

“Yesterday, MOECC executed a search warrant at the company’s Ajax facility. Under the charge, Volkswagen is alleged to have caused or permitted the operation of vehicles that did not comply with emission standards prescribed by Ontario regulation­s,” said Environmen­t Minister Chris Ballard in a statement.

“If the allegation­s are proven in court, penalties for the offence will be determined following a sentencing hearing.”

He added Volkswagen owners, dealers, service managers and technician­s are not the focus of the investigat­ion.

The company, meanwhile, said in a brief statement it is co-operating with the Ontario government and it would not be “appropriat­e” to comment further.

Earlier this year, Quebec and Ontario courts approved a settlement agreement with members of a Canadian classactio­n lawsuit who bought or leased certain Volkswagen or Audi vehicles with diesel engines caught up in the emissions cheating scandal.

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

Volkswagen pleaded guilty in the U.S. after software was found in certain diesel vehicles that made it appear as though the cars were producing fewer emissions than they really were.

In fact, under normal conditions, the cars emitted 35 times Canada’s legal limit on nitrogen oxides, which have adverse effects on human health and contribute to climate change.

About 105,000 of the rigged vehicles were sold in Canada and Volkswagen has a courtcerti­fied settlement program underway to buy back the cars and compensate Canadians who owned or leased them.

Tony Faria, an auto industry analyst at the University of Windsor, said it’s not surprising that Ontario is laying charges two years after the scandal erupted.

“Officials everywhere, not just in Canada but in the U.S., Germany, many other countries where many Volkswagen vehicles had been sold, they’re all still looking into it and at this stage Volkswagen still isn’t finished by a long shot with all of the court cases they have to face,” he said.

Now if we could just get Environmen­t Canada to act. TIM GRAY

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