The Press

Controvers­y could see diesels disappear

- US President BarackObam­a is shown a display on clean diesel by Jeff Shick, of EcoChem Alternativ­e Fuels, during a tour of Cleveland State University’sMAGNET(Manufactur­ing Advocacy and Growth Network) in Cleveland, Ohio.

Eight years ago this week, a tractor-trailer rolled out of Volkswagen’s United States headquarte­rs on a four-month, crosscount­ry mission to persuade America that dirty diesel was dead.

Today, the Dieselutio­n Tour – which promised a new green era for diesel VWs and showcased the 2009 Jetta – plays like a Jon Stewart gag. As the world now knows, VW was cheating on US emissions standards, including those for that new Jetta.

The cheating scandal, which has hammeredVW­shares and cost chief executive Officer Martin Winterkorn his job, could kill diesel in the US – and perhaps even in Europe, where more than half of cars burn the fuel.

‘‘VW may have killed the niche, along with its reputation,’’ said University of Michigan business professor Erik Gordon.

Even before the scandal broke, diesels represente­d just 1 per cent of the US market. Wildly popular in Europe, where petrol is relatively expensive, diesel cars have struggled to win converts in the US and shake their old reputation as unreliable, oil-burning smog machines.

‘‘Clean diesel’’ was supposed to change all that.

Recently, VW had made some gains. Though Americans buy more than three times as many hybrids and electric models as diesels, according to Baum & Associates, hybrid sales have been slowing and actually slipped last year as petrol prices fell.

By contrast, sales of diesel vehicles have grown for eight years in a row.

That’s a testament to VW’s relentless marketing of its Turbocharg­ed Direct Injection – or TDI – technology. Many drivers shun hybrids such as the Toyota Prius because they deem them geeky and poky.

VWJettas and Passats are more fun to drive – and buyers could feel good about helping the environmen­t. Plus, the cars are German. What could go wrong?

No group fell harder for the VW line than Generation X. Unlike their boomer parents, who well remember the smoky, clattering diesel cars of the 1970s, Gen Xers saw VW technology as an elegant compromise between horsepower and green cred.

About 58 per cent of Americans shopping for diesel cars this year were Gen Xers, according to TrueCar, which tracks industry sales. Needless to say, many now feel like fools.

Nikki Medoro,

36,

almost bought a Prius when she moved to San Jose, California. She wanted to limit the expense and environmen­tal impact of her daily commute to and from San Francisco. A friend at the radio station where Medoro is a newsreader persuaded her to buy a 2012 Jetta diesel sports wagon instead. It was her first Volkswagen.

‘‘I’ve been their No 1 fricking fan this whole time,’’ she said. ‘‘I told everyone about my car. I loved my car. Then this happened.

‘‘I get madder every moment that passes by about this. Every mile of that, I was just polluting. I feel so duped.’’

Many VW buyers talked up the merits of VWdiesels to friends and family, providing VW with incalculab­le word-of-mouth publicity. Now the German automaker risks turning this group of former acolytes into boisterous detractors.

Already, angry owners are blasting VW on social media.

On Twitter, Mo Fei Chen asked if Herbie, VW’s automotive star of The Love Bug, was even real.

‘‘Just as their engagement in favour of diesels may have worked in diesel’s favour, their engagement can hurt diesel and VW as well,’’ said Ed Kim, a vicepresid­ent of industry analysis at research firm AutoPacifi­c.

It has never been easy to persuade Americans to buy diesels because they typically cost more than petrol-powered vehicles. The diesel version of VW’s Touareg sells for US$7500 more than the regular SUV but offers 26 per cent better fuel economy.

The question now is what will happen to VW’s vaunted diesel mileage once the company turns on the emission controls outside the testing lab.If, as expected, the fuel economy drops along with engine performanc­e, suddenly that price gap makes a lot less sense.

Diesel in under threat even in Europe, where automakers received government subsidies to research and develop the technology.

The VW cheating scandal will probably accelerate calls from politician­s such as Paris’s mayor, who say diesel emits more pollutants than gasoline-powered vehicles.

Meanwhile, stricter air quality regulation­s have made it so expensive to build diesel engines that some automakers have stopped putting them in their smallest cars. This week Max Warburton, a London-based auto analyst at Sanford C Bernstein, distribute­d a note to clients titled ‘‘The Day Diesel Died’’.

The Diesel Technology Forum, a Frederick, Maryland-based nonprofit organisati­on dedicated to promoting the fuel, said that ‘‘circumstan­ces involving a single manufactur­er do not define an entire technology, or an industry’’.

No automaker has put more of its chips on diesel than Volkswagen. Much of the company’s strategy to meet tougher US fuel economy standards rests on the technology.

In a sign that VW is rethinking that philosophy, the automaker said recently that it plans to roll out 20 electric cars and plug-in hybrids by 2020. In the meantime, it has a lot of brand repair to do.

After learning that her 2011 diesel Jetta station wagon had turned her into an unwitting uberpollut­er, Grabriela Paz, a single mom from Oakland, California, knew one thing for sure: ‘‘I definitely won’t buy a VWagain.’’

Washington Post-Bloomberg

 ?? Photo: REUTERS ??
Photo: REUTERS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand