The New Zealand Herald

Firm faces Thursday deadline to present a plan to fix 2.8m vehicles in home market

- Patrick Donahue — Bloomberg

Volkswagen’s designated chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch is warning managers that the dieselemis­sions scandal could pose “an existence-threatenin­g crisis for the company,” as it pleads for public trust with full-page ads in national newspapers.

The German carmaker faces a deadline on Thursday to present a plan to fix around 2.8 million vehicles in its home market.

Poetsch told managers last week he was certain the Germany-based carmaker will overcome the crisis with enough effort, according to Welt am Sonntag newspaper.

Volkswagen and German industry have been rocked by charges, first made by US regulators last month, that the carmaker had used software to hoodwink regulators about the emissions of its diesel cars for years.

As owners of 11 million affected cars across the globe, regulators and investors await answers, the crisis has wiped almost 30 billion ($52 billion) off the company’s value.

As Volkswagen’s new chief executive, Matthias Mueller, vows to repair the damage, the carmaker undertook a media campaign that included a full-page mea culpa advertisem­ent published in major German newspapers to mark the 25th anniversar­y of the country’s reunificat­ion.

Instead of lauding a quarter century of German unity, the company used fine print on a broad white field to say it would dispense with celebrator­y expression­s, instead assuring the public that it will resolve the crisis. “We just want to say one thing: We will do everything to win back your trust,” the carmaker said in the ad yesterday.

After mostly remaining silent on the cheating scandal, Chancellor Angela Merkel yesterday called the disclosure by Germany’s largest carmaker “a dramatic event” and said Volkswagen must clarify the affair swiftly.

She ruled out a longer-term impact on the country’s industry.

“I believe that the reputation of German industry, the trust in Germany as a business location, hasn’t been so shaken that we won’t continue to be seen as a good business location,” Merkel told Deutschlan­dfunk radio. An internal investigat­ion has already yielded several engineers who admitted to installing the fraudulent software in 2008 for EA 189 diesel-motor models, Bild am Sonntag newspaper reported yesterday.

The decision for the regulatory work-around came as project engineers determined there was no way to meet both emissions standards and cost controls, a jam that threatened to bring the marquee pro- ject to a halt, Bild said.

The result was a so-called defeat device that disengaged emissions controls when an auto wasn’t being tested, breaching emissions rules and prompting a raft of government investigat­ions and lawsuits since the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency cited the violations last month.

Volkswagen has also found more executives are involved in the scandal than previously acknowledg­ed, a group bigger than just a few developers, Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Sonntagsze­itung reported, citing officials close to the supervisor­y board.

Volkswagen declined to comment on the German newspaper reports.

Martin Winterkorn quit as CEO last month. Audi developmen­t chief Ulrich Hackenberg, a Winterkorn confidante who was responsibl­e for VW brand developmen­t from 2007 to 2013, and Wolfgang Hatz, who ran the group’s powertrain developmen­t from 2007 to 2011, are among others who will leave, according to people familiar with the matter.

Engine-parts supplier Robert Bosch warned VW in 2007 that its planned use of the software was illegal, Bild reported last month.

In contrast with Merkel, European Parliament president Martin Schulz, a German Social Democrat, said the scandal is a “grave blow for the German economy as a whole”.

“It’s hard to believe the level of negligence and possibly even criminal activity that was present here,” Schulz told the Funke group of German newspapers.

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