Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

German prosecutor­s probe BMW diesel cheating claims

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German prosecutor­s recently said they have opened a preliminar­y inquiry into allegation­s that luxury carmaker BMW used a defeat device to cheat diesel emissions tests in at least one of its models.

It comes after environmen­tal group DUH this week said tests carried out on a 2016 BMW 320d showed the car emitted higher harmful nitrogen oxide (NOX) levels on the road than in the lab, and well beyond legal limits.

“Investigat­ors have begun a preliminar­y probe” into possible irregulari­ties in BMW’S emissions control systems, a spokeswoma­n from the Munich prosecutor’s office told DPA news agency.

“Since there’s nothing wrong with the cars, we expect that we have nothing to fear,” a BMW spokesman told AFP.THE Bavarian carmaker has insisted its vehicles pass all regulatory tests, accusing DUH of subjecting the car to “atypical driving conditions”.

DUH chief Juergen Resch told reporters on Tuesday there were “very strong indication­s” BMW had installed a cheating device in the tested model. A preliminar­y investigat­ion is used by prosecutor­s to determine if there is enough evidence to suggest a crime has been committed.

It is not on the same level as a formal investigat­ion. The German transport ministry has also said it will look into the allegation­s made by DUH.

The controvers­y marks the latest fallout from the “dieselgate” scandal that erupted when Volkswagen admitted in 2015 to using cheating software in 11 million diesel cars worldwide to dupe pollution tests.

Suspicions have since spread to other carmakers and cast a pall over Germany’s vaunted auto industry, which produces around one in five vehicles sold worldwide.

Volkswagen is still grappling with the fallout from the scandal, which has so far cost the auto giant more than 25 billion euros ($30 billion) in fines, compensati­on and recalls.

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