USA TODAY International Edition

VW IS ONLY THE LATEST CAR CHEATER

Automakers have repeatedly proved that they can’t regulate themselves

- Dan Becker and James Gerstenzan­g Dan Becker directs the Safe Climate Campaign of the Center for Auto Safety. James Gerstenzan­g is the campaign’s editorial director.

The diesel engines on which Volkswagen relied for at least seven years could meet critical emissions standards only with software designed to cheat on government tests, the Obama administra­tion disclosed this month. But in the ranks of cheaters, VW is not alone. At some point over the past four decades, VW has had plenty of company among big automakers in trying to evade emissions restrictio­ns.

Four steps could put an end to this history of malfeasanc­e: The government must investigat­e the extent of the cheating, punish VW, prosecute company officials wherever criminal behavior is found — and overhaul its system for testing vehicles’ emissions and fuel efficiency.

Right now, companies conduct tests for fuel efficiency as well as smog and soot emissions — which cause and exacerbate lung disease and worsen childhood asthma — largely on their own. With little spot- checking, the government accepts the results. But the polluters have proved they cannot be trusted to police themselves. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency must take complete control of the tests. TESTING FLAWS Company after company has been cheating. Chrysler recalled half its 1973 vehicles after the EPA caught it using “defeat devices” that increased smog- causing nitrogen oxide emissions. General Motors paid a $ 45 million penalty for using devices that let 1991 Cadillacs spew three times the carbon monoxide allowed by law. Honda paid a $ 267 million fine for using defeat devices on 1.6 million 1996 and 1997 models. Diesel engine manufactur­ers were fined more than $ 1 billion in the 1990s for using similar devices.

Last year, Hyundai and Kia were fined for overstatin­g their gas mileage, and Ford was forced to roll back its fuel efficiency claims. Improved fuel efficiency — spewing less carbon dioxide — is key to fighting global warming.

The current testing protocol lets companies routinely measure their most efficient, least polluting models and then extrapolat­e across their entire production, projecting companywid­e mileage to demonstrat­e whether they are meeting government standards. This allows them to deliver the most optimistic, though not necessaril­y accurate, reports. And you wonder why the mileage you get differs from what the window sticker claimed?

Rather than spot- checking 15% to 20% of all models before allowing companies to offer them for sale, the government must check 100% — on the road as well as in the lab. The automakers’ cheating has made the expanded testing necessary. They must pony up the additional cost. INSUFFICIE­NT PENALTIES EPA must also find out which VW officials were responsibl­e for what appears to be one of the biggest frauds in recent automotive history and how the company will make sure that every polluting vehicle is repaired. Agency hearings featuring sworn testimony from all auto CEOs — subject to perjury laws — should explore whether their vehicles pollute too much. The lasting image of Big Tobacco’s chiefs lined up to tell congressio­nal investigat­ors 20 years ago that nicotine is not addictive might make the auto executives think twice.

Clearly, the penalties haven’t been sufficient to discourage cheating. The government must levy the strongest allowed punishment on VW. Anything less than roughly $ 18 billion — reflecting the maximum allowable fine of $ 37,500 per vehicle — would be inexcusabl­e.

The administra­tion must also prosecute any VW officials who helped the company break the law, and it must be prepared to go after executives at other companies found to be getting around emissions requiremen­ts.

The automakers have a long history of fighting environmen­tal proposals and lobbying for loopholes. Car makers are trying to weaken the Obama administra­tion’s fuel efficiency standard that would deliver a new- car fleet averaging 54.5 mpg in 2025.

Volkswagen’s conduct is only the latest evidence that auto companies cannot be trusted to implement critical laws that keep the air clean. Only strict regulation will do the job. We need tight monitoring by regulators with strong enforcemen­t authority and the guts to make sure companies comply with strict regulation­s, and an auto industry that is certain it will face painful punishment if caught.

Government guard dogs must watch more closely and bark louder. But that’s not enough; auto companies must feel their bite as well.

 ?? PATRIK STOLLARZ, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? A Volkswagen branch in Dusseldorf. German prosecutor­s have opened an investigat­ion into the former CEO of VW.
PATRIK STOLLARZ, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES A Volkswagen branch in Dusseldorf. German prosecutor­s have opened an investigat­ion into the former CEO of VW.

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