The Mercury News

VW’s $15B settlement moves ahead

Judge’s OK allows vehicle owners to be alerted, weigh payoff and opt in or out

- By Sudhin Thanawala Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — A nearly $15 billion settlement over Volkswagen’s emissions cheating scandal cleared a key hurdle Tuesday, with a federal judge giving preliminar­y approval to the deal that includes an option for owners to have the carmaker buy back their vehicles.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer called the settlement an “enormous effort” by attorneys from both sides and urged Volkswagen owners who may want to opt out and pursue their own lawsuits to consider the deal’s environmen­tal achievemen­ts.

“Because that’s significan­t, and that’s part of what you’re attempting to achieve in this settlement,” said Breyer, who is overseeing consumer lawsuits and government allegation­s that Volkswagen’s diesel engines cheated U.S. emissions tests.

The German carmaker has agreed to spend up to $10 billion buying back or repairing about 475,000 Volkswagen and Audi vehicles with 2-liter diesel engines and paying their owners an additional $5,100 to $10,000 each. Details about the vehicle repairs have not been finalized.

The settlement also includes $2.7 billion for unspecifie­d environmen­tal mitigation and an additional $2 billion to promote zero-emissions vehicles.

The judge’s decision allows attorneys to notify vehicle owners of the terms and consumers to use a settlement website to determine how much compensati­on they would get. They could object and opt out, allowing them to pursue legal action against Volkswagen on their own.

The deal does not cover about 85,000 more-powerful Volkswagen­s and Audis with 3-liter engines also caught up in the emissions scandal.

Volkswagen has acknowledg­ed that the cars were programmed to turn on emissions controls during government lab tests and turn them off while on the road. Investigat­ors found that the cars emitted more than 40 times the legal limit of nitrogen oxide, which can cause respirator­y problems.

“This is a very fair and reasonable settlement … and it allows Volkswagen to turn the page and begin to make things right in the United States and begin to reearn the trust of our customers.” — Robert Giuffra, lawyer for Volkswagen

The company still faces billions more dollars in fines and penalties and possible criminal charges.

Breyer’s preliminar­y approval of the settlement was expected.

The judge, who is set to make a final decision in October, has kept close tabs on the negotiatio­ns and praised the efforts of attorneys and a court-appointed settlement master who helped broker the deal.

Still, attorneys for vehicle owners spent considerab­le time in court Tuesday presenting what they called the benefits of the deal and highlighti­ng positive feedback, including from the media.

“We have designed a settlement that places the consumers — the owners and lessees — in a central, decisive role,” said Elizabeth Cabraser, lead attorney for Volkswagen owners.

Robert Giuffra, an attorney for the automaker, said the company supported the deal.

“This is a very fair and reasonable settlement … and it allows Volkswagen to turn the page and begin to make things right in the United States and begin to re-earn the trust of our customers,” he said.

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