Business standard has posted by Volkswagen reaches $14.7B emissions settlement would repair or buy back polluting vehicles and pay each owner as much
as $10,000 under a $14.7 billion deal the car maker has reached to
settle lawsuits stemming from its emissions cheating scandal, a person
briefed on the settlement talks said.
The deal sets aside $10 billion to repair or buy back roughly 475,000 polluting Volkswagen vehicles
with 2-litre diesel engines, and to compensate each owner with an
additional payment of between $5,100 and $10,000, the person said.
The person asked not to be identified because the deal will not be
filed in court until Tuesday, and a judge has ordered attorneys not to
talk about it before then.
Owners who pick the buybacks would get the clean trade-in value of
their cars from before the scandal became public on September 18, 2015.
The average value of a VW diesel has dropped 19% since just before the
scandal began. In August of 2015, the average was $13,196, and this May
it was $10,674, according to Kelley Blue Book.
The settlement still requires a judge's approval before it can go into effect.
The scandal erupted in September when it was learnt that the German
automaker had fitted many of its cars with software to fool emissions
tests and had put dirty vehicles on the road.
Investigators determined that the cars emitted more than 40 times the
legal limit of nitrogen oxide, which can cause respiratory problems in
humans. Car owners and the U.S. Department of Justice sued.
The settlement also includes $2.7 billion for environmental mitigation
and another $2 billion for research on zero-emissions technology, the
person said.
The $14.7 billion would eclipse the cost of all recent automotive
scandals. But VW is still facing billions of dollars in fines and
penalties that are not part of the deal.
The company has admitted developing sophisticated software that
determined when the cars were being tested by the EPA on a
treadmill-like device called a dynamometer and turned on the pollution
controls. Once all wheels began spinning and the steering wheel was
turned, the controls were turned off.
The company, which knew the EPA's testing routine, got away with the
scam for seven years before being caught by the International Council on
Clean Transportation, which hired West Virginia University to test a VW
in real roads conditions.
The settlement does not include another roughly 90,000 3-litre
Volkswagen diesels, which had another version of cheating software.
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