The Borneo Post (Sabah)

EU bank suspects VW fraud in Dieselgate scandal

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BRUSSELS: The European Investment Bank said it suspected Volkswagen may have fraudulent­ly secured a loan of 400 million euros to develop technology used to cheat EU emissions tests.

EIB chief President Werner Hoyer said the bank was reviewing the conclusion­s of a probe by the EU’s anti-fraud office OLAF into whether the German automaker used the loan to make the ‘defeat device’ in the so-called Dieselgate scandal.

He added that the Luxembourg­based EIB had suspended business ties with VW and is not considerin­g any new loans to the automaker.

“We are very disappoint­ed at what is asserted by the OLAF investigat­ion, namely that the EIB was misled by VW about the use of the defeat device,” Hoyer said in a statement.

“We still cannot exclude that one of our loans, the 400 million euro (US$472 million) loan ‘Volkswagen Antrieb RDI,’ was linked to emission control technologi­es developed at the time the defeat software was designed and used,” Hoyer said.

Volkswagen admitted in September 2015 that it installed software devices in 11 million diesel-engine cars worldwide that reduced emissions of harmful nitrogen oxides when it detected the vehicle was undergoing tests.

“We will now review OLAF’s conclusion­s and consider all available and appropriat­e action,” Hoyer said, adding OLAF questioned EIB officials and consulted bank documents as part of its investigat­ion.

Since 1990, VW’s worldwide operations have received around five billion euros in loans from EIB, with 4.5 billion in Europe, EIB said.

“Their scope includes technologi­es targeting improved environmen­tal performanc­e of passenger cars, which in total accounted for about one third of the total lending to Volkswagen since 1990,” EIB said.

OLAF concluded its investigat­ion last month and sent the results to the prosecutor’s office in the central German city of Brunswick and to the EIB, a spokeswoma­n for OLAF said. The Brunswick prosecutor’s office was unable to confirm it had received the investigat­ion results.

Following the scandal, the European Commission, the executive of the 28-nation EU, is getting more powers to monitor testing and fine automakers.

The commission and member states have come under fire for allowing automakers to justify a long list of exceptions and loopholes when being checked for pollutants.

In the United States, where authoritie­s first exposed the wrongdoing, VW has already committed to pay US$23 billion to aggrieved customers to settle lawsuits in addition to repairing the vehicles. — AFP

 ??  ?? Photo shows a hose sticking in the exhaust pipe of aVolkswage­n diesel car during an emission test at a workshop in Frankfurt an der Oder, eastern Germany. The European Investment Bank said it suspected Volkswagen may have fraudulent­ly secured a loan of...
Photo shows a hose sticking in the exhaust pipe of aVolkswage­n diesel car during an emission test at a workshop in Frankfurt an der Oder, eastern Germany. The European Investment Bank said it suspected Volkswagen may have fraudulent­ly secured a loan of...

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