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Business / World Business

Volkswagen ignored warnings on ‘illegal’ cheat software

Published: 28 Sep 2015 - 02:02 am | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 07:17 am
Peninsula

A Volkswagen bus from the Porsche museum is displayed during the Porsche Rennsport Reunion V at Laguna Seca Raceway in California.

Berlin: Volkswagen ignored warnings from staff and a supplier years ago that the emission test rigging software that sparked the company’s worst ever scandal was illegal, German media reports said yesterday.
German authorities meanwhile heaped pressure on the embattled corporate titan, demanding it set out a timeline by October 7 on how it will ensure its diesel cars meet national emission standards without using the cheat technology. VW sparked global outrage when it admitted that 11 million of its diesel cars are fitted with so-called defeat devices that activate pollution controls during tests but covertly turn them off when the car is on the road.
The spiralling scandal has badly tarnished VW’s name, left it exposed to up to $18bn in US fines, and wiped out a third off its stock market value in a week.
Last Friday, the VW board tapped company insider Matthias Mueller — chief of its luxury sports car brand Porsche — to steer the world’s largest automaker out of the wreckage.
Mueller, 62, who replaces Martin Winterkorn as CEO, pledged in a letter to the company’s 600,000 staff “an unsparing investigation” as VW faces “an unprecedent challenge,” the Handelsblatt daily reported yesterdfay. But an internal probe has already unearthed more troubling news for the German auto giant, as it faces the risk of judicial penalties and class action lawsuits, according to newspaper reports.
Bild am Sonntag said auto parts supplier Bosch which produced the device had warned the VW Group as early as 2007 that it was meant for test use only and that using it on the road would be illegal.
A Bosch spokesman declined comment, citing a confidentiality agreement with its business partner.
According to the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung (FAS), a VW employee had also sounded the alarm in 2011, warning that the software may spell an “infringement” of the law.
According to the article headlined “What did Winterkorn know?”, and citing unnamed VW supervisory board sources, the internal probe had so far failed to discover why that warning was not acted on by management.
Meanwhile, VW came under pressure at home to quickly outline how it will fix the problem, which affects 2.8 million cars sold in Germany.
The federal motor vehicle office (KBA) told Volkzwagen to set out “binding measures and a timetable” by October 7 on how it will meet emissions standards without resorting to software that rigs test results, Bild am Sonntag reported. If Volkswagen fails to comply, the KBA warned it could withdraw approval for the affected models, meaning they could no longer be sold or even moved on German roads.
A VW spokesman said the company would soon present an action plan in Germany and “announce when we expect to launch a recall”, adding that “we are working at full throttle”.
The software would be updated free of charge “so that it conforms with the law”, spokesman Peter Thul said, adding: “If we need to do more... we will”.
Leading newspapers asked questions about the degree to which the German government has shielded the crucial auto sector against tougher emission rules. “There is close cooperation between the auto industry, politics and the bureaucracy,” charged Juergen Resch, head of the group German Environmental Aid, in Die Welt am Sonntag. AFP