Windsor Star

VW faces accusation of emissions cheating in Audi gasoline cars

- KARTIKAY MEHROTRA

Volkswagen AG’s plot to cheat emissions tests by installing socalled defeat devices in its vehicles wasn’t limited to diesel cars, but also included at least six models of Audi 3.0-litre gasoline engines, according to a consumer lawsuit.

In a class action on behalf of owners of more than 100,000 vehicles, the German carmaker’s Audi unit was accused of installing software designed to beat emissions tests in its A6, A8, Q5 and Q7 cars since February, 2013, and possibly earlier. According to the complaint filed Tuesday in Chicago federal court, Audi executives encouraged use of the devices in gas-powered vehicles as recently as May, eight months after the diesel cheating was publicly disclosed.

VW spokeswoma­n Jeannine Ginivan and Audi spokesman Mark Clothier declined to comment on the complaint.

The lawsuit comes two weeks after U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer gave his final approval to VW’s US$14.7-billion settlement covering 480,000 diesel cars with 2.0-litre engines, widely seen as a benchmark achievemen­t for the carmaker. VW still doesn’t have an approved way to fix any of the 560,000 cars still polluting U.S. roads.

Volkswagen shares has lost almost 30 per cent since the emissions scandal broke in September, 2015, valuing the company at 61.5 billion euros (US$67.2 billion).

The automaker faces a potential trial with owners of 3.0-litre diesel cars in the U.S., in addition to shareholde­r claims, environmen­tal lawsuits by multiple states and criminal investigat­ions by the U.S. Justice Department and European authoritie­s.

“Throughout the yearlong dieselgate scandal, Audi chose to continue to deceive consumers across the country with yet another emissions-cheating device installed in even more of its vehicles,” said attorney Steve Berman of Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP, the Seattle-based firm representi­ng consumers in Wednesday’s complaint. “This kind of flagrant disregard for federal environmen­tal regulation­s and consumers’ expectatio­ns is unacceptab­le, and we intend to hold Audi to the law on behalf of those who overpaid for Audi’s non-compliant, polluting cars.”

While the algorithm-based defeat device in diesel cars would veil the vehicle’s real emissions, the gas cars are capable of detecting that the vehicle is in a testing bay and then shifts into an artificial “low rev” mode, according to the complaint.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? An Audi diesel. A new lawsuit alleges VW unit Audi used emissions-cheating devices in gas cars.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES An Audi diesel. A new lawsuit alleges VW unit Audi used emissions-cheating devices in gas cars.

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