Arab Times

Opel premises searched in emissions probe

-

German prosecutor­s said Monday that law enforcemen­t officials have conducted searches at automaker Opel as part of an investigat­ion into suspected manipulati­on of diesel emissions.

Meanwhile, the country’s transporta­tion ministry said it intended to order 100,000 Opel vehicles recalled, saying Opel had dragged out voluntary fixes.

The dpa news agency reported that investors went to company facilities Monday in the cities of Russelshei­m and Kaiserslau­tern. Nadja Niesen, a spokeswoma­n for prosecutor­s in Frankfurt, was cited by dpa as saying investigat­ors suspect Opel may have used software to turn off emissions controls at certain engine speeds and temperatur­es.

Opel, which is part of France’s PSA Group after being sold by General Motors last year, confirmed the searches but declined to offer details.

Diesel came under scrutiny in Europe after Volkswagen admitted to illegally manipulati­ng software to cheat on US emissions test. Cars from other automakers were subsequent­ly found to turn off controls at certain temperatur­es, ostensibly to protect the engine but also increasing emissions.

Germany’s transporta­tion ministry said in a statement that it had found four instances in which emissions were turned off in the affected models, and that Opel had dragged out a voluntary recall to fix them to the extent that only 70 percent of those vehicles have had their software adjusted to lower emissions.

 ??  ?? This file photo takenon March 6, 2017 shows the headquarte­rs of German car maker Opel in Ruesselshe­im, western Germany. German police said on Oct 15, 2018 they had raided French-ownedcarma­ker Opel, as local media reported the manufactur­er wasthe latest suspected of having manipulate­d diesel cars’ exhaustemi­ssions to cheat regulatory tests. (AFP)
This file photo takenon March 6, 2017 shows the headquarte­rs of German car maker Opel in Ruesselshe­im, western Germany. German police said on Oct 15, 2018 they had raided French-ownedcarma­ker Opel, as local media reported the manufactur­er wasthe latest suspected of having manipulate­d diesel cars’ exhaustemi­ssions to cheat regulatory tests. (AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait