Chattanooga Times Free Press

New VW CEO promises a more ethical culture,

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FRANKFURT, Germany — Volkswagen’s new CEO, Herbert Diess, has vowed to build a more ethical culture following the company’s diesel emissions scandal and outlined a new structure aimed at streamlini­ng decision-making at the sprawling company.

Diess said Thursday at a shareholde­r meeting that the company’s six divisions would make their own decisions and without always getting approval from the top.

He said that while cases of unethical conduct can happen anywhere, “we definitely had too many of them.” He said achieving a stronger ethics culture was a core business goal, “just as are vehicle developmen­t and marketing.”

Diess was addressing his first shareholde­r meeting since taking over as CEO from Matthias Mueller on April 12. He praised Mueller’s contributi­ons to moving the company past the scandal and said he took over with the company in “robust condition.”

Despite heavy outlays for fines and penalties, the company has 24 billion euros in net cash and achieved record sales of 10.74 million vehicles last year. “Two years ago, no one would have believed it, perhaps even we would not have,” Diess said.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency found in 2015 that Volkswagen manipulate­d software so that diesel emissions controls worked only when cars were on test stands. Otherwise they continued to emit harmful nitrogen oxide in excess of legal limits.

The company also was widely criticized for conducting experiment­s in which monkeys were exposed to diesel fumes in an unsuccessf­ul attempt to prove the diesel technology was safe.

Board Chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch condemned the monkey experiment­s in his speech. He said they were under investigat­ion and “in no way comprehens­ible.”

He told the shareholde­r meeting that the company still faces several legal issues from the diesel scandal and that the company “cannot draw the line under it” yet. Those include a shareholde­r lawsuit before a court in the German town of Braunschwe­ig that alleges company officials were too slow in disclosing the scandal, depriving investors of informatio­n they needed to make decisions about their holdings.

Prosecutor­s are also conducting criminal investigat­ions. In the U.S., Volks-wagen pleaded guilty to criminal violations and two executives have been sentenced to prison there. Other executives face criminal charges in the U.S. but cannot be extradited under German law.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Herbert Diess, left, CEO of the Volkswagen stock company, and the members of the Board of Management of Volkswagen, Frank Witter and Hiltrud Dorothea Werner, attend a shareholde­rs’ meeting in Berlin, Germany, Thursday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Herbert Diess, left, CEO of the Volkswagen stock company, and the members of the Board of Management of Volkswagen, Frank Witter and Hiltrud Dorothea Werner, attend a shareholde­rs’ meeting in Berlin, Germany, Thursday.

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