Houston Chronicle

EU begins legal action against 4 countries over VW emissions

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BRUSSELS — The European Union is starting legal action against Britain, Germany, Spain and Luxembourg for not imposing penalties against Volkswagen for using illegal software to hide vehicle emissions.

The European Commission also said Thursday that it believes Britain and Germany “broke the law by refusing to disclose, when requested by the Commission, all the technical informatio­n” they gathered on Volkswagen emissions.

It said the technical informatio­n concerns “potential nitrogen oxide emissions irregulari­ties in cars by Volkswagen Group AG and other car manufactur­ers on their territorie­s.”

In the wake of the Volkswagen diesel emissions scandal, the European Commission called on all EU states to test for socalled “defeat devices” on other makes of vehicles.

A number of member states found that such stealth software is being used by others, but they believe the use is covered under an exemption because the equipment is aimed at protecting the vehicle’s motor. However, the Commission said it needs that data to verify if this is the case.

The European Commission, which supervises the applicatio­n of EU laws, has given the countries two months to respond to its allegation­s.

German automaker Volkswagen has been trying to cut costs to recover from the fallout of the scandal.

The company has agreed to pay $15 billion under a settlement with U.S. authoritie­s and owners of some 500,000 vehicles with software that turned off emissions controls.

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