The Phnom Penh Post

US sues Fiat over emissions

- Douglas Gillison

US ENVIRONMEN­TAL regulators on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against Fiat Chrysler, accusing the company of installing devices on its trucks that hid harmful emissions during testing.

The company kept the software’s existence from regulators during the certificat­ion process for 104,000 3.0-litre light-duty diesel vehicles, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, which announced the charges filed in federal court in Michigan.

The latest legal action against a carmaker comes the same month that Germany’s Volkswagen closed the last major US chapter of its own “dieselgate” saga, which has cost that company $22 billion in settlement­s and compensati­on in North America since 2015.

The EPA first made the emissions cheating charge against Fiat Chrysler in January, involving the Ram 1500 and Jeep Grand Cherokees from the 2014 to 2016 model years.

The Italian-American automaker said it was “disappoint­ed” by the lawsuit and “intends to defend itself vigorously, particular­ly against any claims that the Company engaged in any deliberate scheme to install defeat devices to cheat US emissions tests”.

Fiat Chrysler said in a statement it had been working with the EPA on the issue, and already developed updated emissions software it hoped would address of the EPA and California regulators’s concerns.

The company already is facing class-action lawsuits over alleged emissions cheating.

In reacting to the EPA’s allegation­s in January, Fiat Chrysler described the matter as a simply a problem with the calibratio­n of the emissions software, and CEO Sergio Marchionne dismissed allegation­s of illegal conduct by the company.

At the time, the company said it would work with the incoming administra­tion of President Donald Trump to resolve the matter.

Trump and his EPA administra­tor have opposed environmen­tal regulation, which Trump has said destroys “millions” of jobs, and the administra­tion is considerin­g loosening auto emissions standards at the request of the industry.

But the filing of the lawsuit showed the company so far had failed to reach an amicable resolution despite the new occupant in the White House.

According to the complaint, Fiat Chrysler failed to reveal the existence of at least eight auxiliary emissions control devices that, when used separately or together, had the effect of “bypassing, defeating, or rendering inoperativ­e” the vehicles’ pollution control systems.

The lawsuit concerns far fewer vehicles than the VW scandal, which involved 11 million cars sold worldwide. But the complaint is similar in that the devices allowed vehicles to emit more than the permissibl­e levels of nitrogen oxides, which contribute to smog and soot, according to the EPA.

 ?? AFP ?? Jeep vehicles are seen on a sales lot on Tuesday in Miami, Florida. The US government is suing Fiat Chrysler for possibly cheating on emmision controls in the diesel engines for nearly 104,000 Ram pickups and Jeep Grand Cherokees from the 2014 to 2016...
AFP Jeep vehicles are seen on a sales lot on Tuesday in Miami, Florida. The US government is suing Fiat Chrysler for possibly cheating on emmision controls in the diesel engines for nearly 104,000 Ram pickups and Jeep Grand Cherokees from the 2014 to 2016...

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