Ottawa Citizen

VW lashed with new allegation­s of cheating

- MICHAEL BIESECKER AND TOM KRISHER

U.S. regulators say they have a lot more questions for Volkswagen, triggered by the company’s recent disclosure of additional suspect software in 2016 diesel models that potentiall­y would help exhaust systems run cleaner during government tests.

That’s more bad news for VW dealers looking for new cars to replace the ones they can no longer sell because of the worldwide cheating scandal already engulfing the world’s largest automaker. And, depending on what the Environmen­tal Protection Agency eventually finds, it raises the possibilit­y of even more severe punishment.

Volkswagen confirmed to The Associated Press on Tuesday that the “auxiliary emissions control device” at issue operates differentl­y from the “defeat” device software included in the company’s 2009 to 2015 models disclosed last month.

The new software was first revealed to Environmen­tal Protection Agency and California regulators on Sept. 29, prompting the company last week to withdraw applicatio­ns for approval to sell the 2016 cars in the U.S.

“We have a long list of questions for VW about this,” said Janet McCabe, acting assistant EPA administra­tor for air quality. “We’re getting some answers from them, but we do not have all the answers yet.”

The delay means that thousands of 2016 Beetles, Golfs and Jettas will remain quarantine­d in U.S. ports until a fix can be developed, approved and implemente­d. Diesel versions of the Passat sedan manufactur­ed at the company’s plant in Chattanoog­a, Tenn., also are on hold.

Volkswagen already faces a criminal investigat­ion and billions of dollars in fines for violating the Clean Air Act for its earlier emissions cheat, as well as a raft of state investigat­ions and classactio­n lawsuits filed on behalf of customers.

If EPA rules the new software is a second defeat device specifical­ly aimed at gaming government emissions tests, it would call into question repeated assertions by top VW executives that responsibi­lity for the cheating scheme lay with a handful of rogue software developers who wrote the illegal code installed in prior generation­s of its four-cylinder diesel engines.

That a separate device was included in the redesigned 2016 cars could suggest a multi-year effort by the company to influence U.S. emissions tests that continued even after regulators began pressing the company last year about irregulari­ties with the emissions produced by the older cars.

The software at issue makes a pollution-control catalyst heat up faster, improving performanc­e of the device that separates smogcausin­g nitrogen oxide into harmless nitrogen and oxygen gases.

“This has the function of a warmup strategy which is subject to approval by the agencies,” said Jeannine Ginivan, a VW spokeswoma­n. “The agencies are currently evaluating this and Volkswagen is submitting additional informatio­n.”

Automakers routinely place auxiliary emissions control devices on passenger vehicles, though they are required by law to disclose them as part of the process to receive the emissions certificat­ions that are required to sell the cars.

EPA’s McCabe wouldn’t say if VW’s failure to disclose the software in its 2016 applicatio­ns was illegal. “I don’t want to speak to any potential subjects of an enforcemen­t activity,” she said.

If VW was cheating a second time, that would probably mean higher fines against the company, said Kelley Blue Book Senior Analyst Karl Brauer.

Regulators are “going to be even more angry than they already are,” Brauer said. “The punitive actions from the EPA are only going to get more aggressive.”

The German automaker already faces up to US$18 billion in potential fines over the nearly half-million vehicles sold with the initial emissions-rigging software.

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