Manila Bulletin

Germany hits Mercedes with mass diesel recall

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN (AFP) - Germany ordered Monday the recall of some 774,000 vehicles from Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler across Europe, citing illegal ''defeat devices'' designed to conceal high levels of harmful emissions from regulators' tests.

''The federal government will order an immediate official recall because of illegal defeat devices,'' Transport Minister Andreas Scheuer said in a statement.

The move mostly affects Vito vans and diesel-powered versions of GLC 4x4s and Cclass sedans, Scheuer added.

Daimler boss Dieter Zetsche was summoned Mongovernm­ent day for crunch talks with Scheuer over emissions irregulari­ties in the firm's vehicles.

''Daimler says the applicatio­ns in the motor control software the federal has found fault with will be removed at the greatest possible speed and in cooperativ­e transparen­cy with the authoritie­s,'' Scheuer said.

A Daimler spokesman confirmed the recall to AFP, adding ''legal questions will be cleared up in the appeal procedure'' against the transport ministry decision.

So-called defeat devices were at the heart of Volkswagen's ''dieselgate'' scandal, in which the world's largest carmaker admitted in September 2015 to installing them in 11 million vehicles worldwide.

Vehicles kept to legal emissions limits for harmful substances like nitrogen oxides (NOx) during lab tests, only to exceed them as much as 40 times in on-road driving.

The scandal has so far cost the world's largest carmaker over 25 billion euros ($29.5 billion) in fines, buybacks and compensati­on, and senior executives are under investigat­ion over their suspected roles in the cheating.

In the years since 2015, other German carmakers have also been forced to recall vehicles to fix manipulate­d software, although none has so far admitted to mass cheating as Volkswagen did.

Recent weeks have seen Germany's KBA vehicle licensing authority hit Volkswagen subsidiari­es Audi and Porsche with mass recall orders over their engine control software, as well as a smaller batch of cars from rival BMW.

Prosecutor­s raided Munich-based BMW in March, saying their investigat­ion was ''only just getting started'' after gathering evidence, and announced on Monday they suspect Audi chief executive Rupert Stadler of fraud.

''The whole European car industry is still stuck in this diesel quagmire, and everything that's been done so far has done nothing to set it free,'' auto industry expert Ferdinand Dudenhoeff­er of the CAR research centre told AFP -- pointing also to Italian and French automakers.

The German government should approve hardware, rather than software alteration­s to manipulate­d vehicles to produce ''an honest solution'' to excessive emissions, Dudenhoeff­er charged.

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