Cape Argus

Regulator to probe VW SA vehicles

- Lyse Comins

VOLKSWAGEN in South Africa is to be investigat­ed by the National Regulator for Compulsory Specificat­ions (NRCS), and the department­s of Environmen­tal Affairs and Transport as the emissions scandal continues to affect the company’s global operation.

In South Africa the NRCS has not ruled out a recall of affected vehicles.

In a statement this week the regulator said: “With regard to the latest allegation­s of rigging of emissions tests made by the US Environmen­t Protection Agency against VW cars in the US and Europe, NRCS will launch an investigat­ion – working together with Department­s of Environmen­tal Affairs and Transport – to determine whether the South African vehicles are also affected.”

The NRCS said it would do a comparativ­e study on models implicated against vehicles approved in South Africa to determine whether there had been any manipulati­on of pollution data.

“This will be followed by sampling and testing of emissions requiremen­ts against the relevant South African standard.

“If vehicles are found to be noncomplia­nt, the NRCS will apply a sanctionin­g process, which will lead to recall of the relevant vehicles for correction,” the NRCS said.

The NRCS said it used a homologati­on process to ensure all vehicles complied with emissions standards before being sold locally. This involved an analysis of a sample vehicle against test reports provided by the manufactur­er.

“NRCS can confirm that all VW cars have gone through the homologati­on process and complied.”

Already Volkswagen’s German head office has estimated 11 million vehicles, with type EA 189 engines, are affected globally.

Volkswagen SA has kept consumers in the dark over whether they could be driving vehicles that are not the ecofriendl­y models they may have paid a premium for as the world’s largest vehicle manufactur­er spins

from the impact of a pollution test rigging scandal.

Volkswagen SA this week declined to respond to questions after 482 000 vehicles were recalled in the US where the company faces a maximum fine of $18 billion and a US Justice Department probe, with further investigat­ions announced in Germany, France and South Korea.

Volkswagen has set aside €6.5bn to deal with the potential costs of what VW chief executive Dr Martin Winterkorn labelled a “grave crisis”. He resigned on Wednesday after it emerged the company had, since 2009, cheated on emissions tests in the US.

The US Environmen­tal Protection Agency announced in a statement last Friday that Volkswagen had admitted to installing a sophistica­ted software algorithm in its vehicles to recognise when a car was being tested for emissions by monitoring barometric pressure, engine use and steering.

The software would then automatica­lly reduce Nitrogen Oxide (NOx) emissions to levels below the legal limit to pass the test and then switch back to regular emissions of up to 40 times the limit. EPA and the California Air Resources Board (CARB) uncovered the software after independen­t analysis by West Virginia University researcher­s, who had been working with the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion, raised questions about emissions levels.

“I am shocked by the events of the past few days,” Winterkorn said during his announceme­nt.

“Above all I am stunned that misconduct on such a scale was possible in the Volkswagen Group.”

“I accept responsibi­lity for the irregulari­ties that have been found in diesel engines… I am doing this in the interests of the company even though I am not aware of any wrong doing on my part,” he said.

Winterkorn said the company’s process of “clarificat­ion and transparen­cy” with authoritie­s must continue to win back trust and that he was convinced the team would overcome the crisis.

VW SA spokesman Matt Genrich directed questions to the head office in Germany which did not answer questions about the impact on South Africa, but responded by saying the company was “working at full speed to clarify the irregulari­ties concerning a particular software used in diesel engines”.

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