The Mail on Sunday

VW’s bizarre ‘mea culpa’ to car buyers over CO2 emissions

Fuel consumptio­n figures in brochure are probably wrong, German giant admits . . . so offer to buy vehicles back, say lawyers

- By Ben Ellery and Martin Delgado

VOLKSWAGEN has issued a bizarre apology to customers about to take delivery of a new car, admitting its own CO2 and fuel-consumptio­n figures are wrong but failing to say how the situation can be rectified.

It comes as the German car-maker braces itself for thousands of compensati­on claims from angry motorists whose vehicles have fallen in value as a result of the emissionsc­heating scandal.

The ‘mea culpa’ is contained in a waiver document which VW has told dealership­s to give to customers when the vehicle is handed over. It follows the revelation that the falsificat­ion of test results affects more models than first thought.

In September, American investigat­ors discovered that software designed to cheat tests for nitrogen oxide emissions had been fitted to 11 million diesel engines. But this

‘Mis-sold owners should demand refund’

month the crisis deepened after it emerged the company had understate­d carbon dioxide and miles-pergallon figures on a further 800,000 petrol and diesel vehicles currently on sale, including other VW brands such as Audi, SEAT and Skoda.

One customer waiting to take delivery of a £17,000 Audi A1 Sportback in South London last week was told that the fuel economy and emission rates in the handbook and promotiona­l material were inaccurate, despite the fact the vehicle had only just rolled off the production line.

When the customer asked about resale value, he received a letter from Volkswagen, saying: ‘The cur- rent CO2 and consumptio­n values for this model are under review and may change. To the extent that CO2 values and fuel consumptio­n are relevant for the purposes of tax, this increase might affect the amount of tax that is payable. The VW Group has informed the relevant government authoritie­s of this issue.’

Vehicle excise duty is partly based on CO2 emission rates. If they were artificial­ly lowered, the vehicles will not have contribute­d enough tax, leaving Volkswagen facing demands to repay billions of pounds, as well as compensati­on to motorists whose cars have fallen in value.

Last night a solicitor representi­ng 10,000 potential claimants said anyone who bought an affected model in the past 30 days should demand a refund if the vehicle did not match the manufactur­er’s descriptio­n. Bozena Michalowsk­a-Howells said: ‘It could be argued that the VW Group, by understati­ng the CO2 emissions and claiming that the cars were environmen­tally friendly, have mis-sold their vehicles.’

Volkswagen UK said it could not comment ‘since our responses need to pass through’ the company’s German headquarte­rs.

 ??  ?? QUESTIONS: The new Audi A1
Sportback
QUESTIONS: The new Audi A1 Sportback

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