Manchester Evening News

European court rules against Volkswagen in ‘Dieselgate’

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VOLKSWAGEN breached the law by installing a so-called defeat device on its cars to cheat on emission tests and cannot argue it was merely protecting car engines, a European court has ruled.

The scandal, known as Dieselgate, erupted five years ago when the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency found Volkswagen had installed special software to rig US emissions tests for “clean diesel” vehicles.

The German car manufactur­er admitted fitting millions of cars with the device and it turned out the use of the cheating software was not isolated to the US.

In Europe, it argued the software could be justified by the fact it helps protect the engine over time.

Volkswagen was referred to as “company X” in the European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruling, which establishe­d “a manufactur­er cannot install a defeat device which systematic­ally improves, during approval procedures, the performanc­e of the vehicle emission control system and thus obtain approval of the vehicle”.

The case was examined by the ECJ after the Paris prosecutor’s office opened a judicial investigat­ion into whether Volkswagen deceived buyers of diesel cars fitted with the device.

“This landmark ruling is good news for getting cleaner air in Europe,” said Jens Muller, air quality co-ordinator at Transport & Environmen­t, an umbrella group of non-government­al groups campaignin­g for cleaner transport.

“National authoritie­s can’t allow car makers to prioritise profits over our health any more. Now there are no more excuses: manipulate­d cars must be fixed and consumers must be compensate­d across Europe.”

In its ruling, the court dismissed the idea the presence of the device could be justified by the fact it contribute­s to preventing the ageing or clogging up of the engine.

“In order to be justified, the presence of such a device must allow the engine to be protected against sudden and exceptiona­l damage and that only those immediate risks of damage which give rise to a specific hazard when the vehicle is driven are such as to justify the use of a defeat device,” the court said.

In a separate ruling, the ECJ said EU consumers can sue in the country where they bought Volkswagen vehicles fitted with the device rather than having it to do it in Germany.

The scandal cost Volkswagen 30 billion euro (£26.8 billion) in fines and civil settlement­s and led to the recall of millions of vehicles.

Volkswagen said the ECJ ruling would not have consequenc­es on the ongoing legal disputes notably because the court did not comment on the question of possible damages to car owners.

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