Posted on 04/22/2016 6:22:39 AM PDT by Red Badger
Former FBI Director Robert Mueller, right, arrives for a court hearing in San Francisco Thursday. Mueller has been overseeing talks about a settlement between Volkswagen, the U.S. government, and the car company's customers.
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A buyback of emissions-cheating cars was one solution Volkswagen offered in federal court Thursday, outlining an agreement between the carmaker and the Justice Department over hundreds of thousands of diesel vehicles that were sold in the U.S. despite not meeting pollution standards.
Car owners would be able to choose between having their vehicle fixed or accepting a buyback; financial details weren't revealed about the plan, which both the government and VW are calling an "agreement in principle."
After VW's plan was announced in San Francisco this morning, Justice Department spokesman Wyn Hornbuckle said:
"This agreement in principle addresses one important aspect of the department's pending case against VW, namely what to do about the 2-liter diesel cars on the road and the environmental consequences resulting from their excess emissions. The department's other investigations into VW's conduct remain active and ongoing."
While the deal's terms weren't discussed in the hearing, Senior District Judge Charles R. Breyer did say consumers deserve "substantial compensation." And the details that emerged bolster a report from Reuters earlier today, which said the owners of nearly 500,000 cars with 2.0-liter engines could receive an offer to buy back those Jettas, Beetles and other vehicles.
"Breyer ordered that the details of the agreement remain confidential until it is finalized likely sometime this summer," NPR's John Ydstie reports for our Newscast unit. "The judge also said drivers who have leased the vehicles in question will be able to end those leases."
Calling the deal "an important step on the road to making things right," Volkswagen issued a statement saying, "As noted today in court, customers in the United States do not need to take any action at this time."
Nearly 600,000 VW-made vehicles sold in the U.S. have "defeat devices" that circumvent emission control systems during driving conditions and activate the controls only during emissions tests, the government says. Found in both 2.0-liter and 3.0-liter versions of VW and Audi diesel cars, the problem is present in millions of cars worldwide.
Before the court session, German newspaper Die Welt had reported that Volkswagen might pay American consumers $5,000 in compensation. That possibility wasn't discussed in court today.
Money for the U.S. restitution effort would presumably come out of the $7 billion emergency fund that Volkswagen created to cope with fallout from the scandal.
One attorney who monitored today's hearing is Tom Young, who's suing Volkswagen on behalf of the environmental protection commission in Hillsborough County, Florida. In an email, he notes that the plan unveiled today "does not include damages that may be levied against VW by the many state and local governments that have sued the automaker."
Young adds, "Those governmental entities are seeking additional billions from Volkswagen."
Frustrated by the lack of progress on a recall and restitution, the Environmental Protection Agency filed a lawsuit against Volkswagen back in January.
If the agreement takes hold, it would be an important step in resolving a scandal that erupted last fall, when the EPA said VW had manipulated its diesel engines so they would pass would pass emissions test, despite producing up to 40 times the pollution allowed under U.S. standards.
This week, the district court in Northern California has been issuing summons related to dozens of lawsuits car owners have filed against Volkswagen since last fall.
As an example, one suit was filed by a couple who live in Big Bear, Calif., and who say they bought a 2010 Jetta "because they thought it was environmentally safe and provided good fuel efficiency" and because Volkswagen had advertised the car's use of "clean diesel."
"In reality, the Vehicle did not meet the applicable EPA and ARB emissions standards," the suit states.
Saying the carmaker won't be able to fix the car without compromising its performance and/or fuel efficiency, the lawsuit seeks damages in the form of either the original purchase price or the overpayment amount, along with attorney's fees and "a civil penalty of two times Plaintiffs' actual damages," citing state law.
As we reported when the scandal exploded back in September:
"The U.S. government also has reason to feel duped: Volkswagen's "clean diesel" TDI engines earned a $1,300 federal tax credit for people who purchased a Jetta sedan or wagon back in 2009, the first year affected by the recall.
"When applied to a base price of around $22,000, the hefty tax credit helped explain why the TDI vehicles were hard to keep in stock."
News of an agreement emerged more than a month after Volkswagen's top U.S. executive, Michael Horn, resigned from the company. It was Horn who endured a grilling about the emissions scandal on Capitol Hill last October, in a candid appearance that included an apology and the statement about the cheating software, "It was installed for this purpose."
Since the scandal began, it has also widened to include more Volkswagen and Audi vehicles, as well as one produced by Porsche. Here's the most current list of vehicles, via the EPA:
Affected 2.0 liter diesel models and model years
Jetta (2009-2015) Jetta Sportwagen (2009-2014) Beetle (2013-2015) Beetle Convertible (2013-2015) Audi A3 (2010-2015) Golf (2010-2015) Golf Sportwagen (2015) Passat (2012-2015)
Affected 3.0 liter diesel vehicle models and model years
Volkswagen Touareg (2009-2016) Porsche Cayenne (2013-2016) Audi A6 Quattro (2014-2016) Audi A7 Quattro (2014-2016) Audi A8 (2014-2016) Audi A8L (2014-2016) Audi Q5 (2014-2016) Audi Q7 (2009-2016)
Now there’s a business OPPORTUNITY!.........................
I don’t think it will affect them negatively. At least not on our side of the aisle............but then, liberals don’t buy diesels anyways......................
A lot of these will be reprogrammed by the dealers, then re-reprogrammed by the owners......................
I'm on my third diesel (none VWs) and I'm a diesel fanatic.I hope this doesn't mean the end of diesels here but if the Rats,or CARB,have any say it probably does.
I see an opportunity for the right person. Find out the buying price VW offers and beat it. Resell the cars to folks who don’t care and simply want mileage.
Probably two or three reasons. First, the diesel variants are considerably more expensive than the gasoline counterparts, which, at the lower price points of the Jetta and Golf, really tends to stick out. Second, most older Americans remember the 70s/80s diesel failures and that stigma sticks. The younger ones, those with skulls of mush, anyway, think diesel is on par with burning piles of used tires.
Lastly, in some areas, diesel prices, combined with the higher purchase price of the car, don't turn people on to the fact they get far better mileage than their gasoline counterparts, and they can't do the math.
I'd take one if I could afford to, but right now, I'm saving up for a diesel pickup and a travel trailer, my car is paid for, and my commute only costs me a tank of gas a month, so there's no incentive for me to buy a new diesel.
It is the California requirements that knock diesel out.
There are so many different brands of diesels in Europe.
We are crippled and stymied as a country.
Because then you can delete the changes and chip the engine and get that great performance back. Just like all the big high performance monster diesels the kids drive.
The current issues with diesels are purely political/environut/business driven.
The EPA has all but come out and said that they want to ban ALL passenger cars and light trucks from having diesel engines. What they're doing now is simply elimination by bureaucracy.
I drove an Alpha 156 diesel in Italy. What a great car - excellent performance and gas mileage - just what you would expect from Alpha Romeo.
It’s ALL Algore’s fault, for saying the internal combustion engine is the greatest threat to mankind.................
Its ALL Algores fault, for saying the internal combustion engine is the greatest threat to mankind.................
Is the manbearpig even still alive? I thought that he either choked to death on CO2, or his brain overheated due to global warming.
Either way, diesels aren’t the problem; science illiterate and lobbyist bribed government lackeys are the problem.
The 'Sexpoodle' lives!.....................
I drove an Alpha 156 diesel in Italy. What a great car - excellent performance and gas mileage - just what you would expect from Alpha Romeo.
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YOu lucky dog! I hear you are losing the twenty.
Sorry about that.
It's the most fun, AND gas efficient car I've ever driven.
I was once cruising at 90, getting 45 mpg. I wanted to have a sign as I blew past all the Prius owners.
If they expect me to get this thing "fixed", they're out of their freaking minds........
I agree with your analysis.
I snooped around at a few VW sites and apparently, they're not offering the TDIs right now. They probably will after this blows over a it. You could maybe buy a used one real cheap but I would only want one that had NOT been modified to comply with the do-gooder laws. The modified ones are probably absolute dogs as far as driving goes.
how about VW strip out all the EPA crap they had to put in the TDI’s so the owners can have a car the works the way it should.
Then give the big. FU to the EPA.
I would take the 5K and spend it on a good tune and upgrades!
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