The Borneo Post

Seat chief says sees CNG cars as possible diesel alternativ­e – Report

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FRANKFURT: Carmaker Seat sees compressed-natural- gas ( CNG) as an alternativ­e fuel to diesel, the chief executive of the Spanish Volkswagen division said.

Seat was betting on CNG in order to compensate for falling diesel car sales, its chief executive Luca de Meo was quoted as saying in part of a report due to run in full in the July 24 issue of Automobilw­oche.

“We have to offer customers a sensible solution. The debate about diesel is continuing and therefore we need other options, he said.

While Seat, bought by Volkswagen in 1986, was less exposed to diesel dependency than premium carmakers, it still had to observe market dynamics very carefully, de Meo said.

“If the mayor of Barcelona decides to close the city center for Euro- 6- diesels, then customers will probably no longer buy diesel cars,” he said.

The finance chief of sister company Porsche, Lutz Meschke, also interviewe­d, said that discussion­s about a diesel-free future were underway.

“In our segment, we have the right answers with plug-in hybrids and purely electrical drives. Why should I anxiously hold on to a diesel?” he said.

Car stocks tumbled after a report in Der Spiegel that VW, BMW, Audi and Porsche may have colluded to fix the prices of diesel emissions treatment systems.

The Spiegel report said that cartel-like behavior may have also applied to vehicle developmen­ts, brakes, petrol and diesel engines, clutches and transmissi­ons, citing a letter sent to cartel authoritie­s.

The companies have not commented on details and only referred to speculatio­n with regard to the report, while Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt said it was now up to antitrust authoritie­s to study the allegation­s.

“The cartel authoritie­s must investigat­e, study the accusation­s in detail and, where necessary, must draw consequenc­es,” he said in remarks to Reuters.

“Cartel behavior would be an additional burden for the (diesel) subject matter that we are currently involved in with the car industry,” Dobrindt said.

German Economy Minister Brigitte Zypries, in separate remarks, echoed this, adding that trust in the entire German automotive industry was at stake.

“Everyone is well advised to cooperate with the state institutio­ns and to create transparen­cy,” she said.

The European Commission said that EU antitrust regulators were investigat­ing the allegation­s. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A logo of Spanish carmaker SEAT, part of the Volkswagen Group, is seen during a news conference in Barcelona, Spain. Seat was betting on CNG in order to compensate for falling diesel car sales, its chief executive Luca de Meo was quoted as saying in...
A logo of Spanish carmaker SEAT, part of the Volkswagen Group, is seen during a news conference in Barcelona, Spain. Seat was betting on CNG in order to compensate for falling diesel car sales, its chief executive Luca de Meo was quoted as saying in...

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