Date: 24/07/17 Chicago Tribune
German carmakers colluded on diesel controls, technology for decades: report
Another week, another scare from the German car industry.
What began with Daimler’s massive recall of more than 3 million diesel cars to lower their emissions, ended on Friday with Audi also embarking on a voluntary recall of 850,000 vehicles. Adding to the spate of bad news was a report in Der Spiegel magazine that the biggest car manufacturers — Daimler, BMW and Volkswagen as well as VW’s Audi and Porsche brands — may have colluded for decades on technology. The companies declined to comment.
Shares of BMW, VW and Daimler tumbled on the report, which cited a document submitted by Volkswagen in July 2016 and referenced another from Daimler. The German cartel office said in a statement that it searched the car companies last year as part of a probe into a possible steel cartel. It didn’t elaborate on a possible follow-up probe on car technology, saying it can’t comment on ongoing investigations.
For almost two years now, the German car industry has sought to get out from underneath the cloud of the diesel scandal that erupted first at VW and has cost it billions in fines and has since threatened to engulf other carmakers, tainting the image of German engineering and hurting the industry that’s among the country’s biggest employers.
The scandal comes as automakers wrestle with an unprecedented technology shift in the industry, with electronic cars made by Tesla or Toyota finding more buyers and German manufacturers trying to catch up with the battery-powered vehicle trend.
According to the Spiegel report, the five German car brands met starting in the 1990s to coordinate activities related to their vehicle technology, costs, suppliers and strategy as well as emissions controls in diesel engines. The discussions involved more than 200 employees in 60 working groups in areas including auto development, gasoline and diesel motors, brakes and transmissions. Talks may have also involved the size of tanks for AdBlue fluid for diesel autos, the magazine reported, which is at the heart of the emissions case.
“These allegations look very serious and would mean more than 20 years of potential collusion,” said Juergen Pieper, a Frankfurt-based analyst with Bankhaus Metzler. “There seems to be a never ending story of bad news about the industry’s bad behavior.”
Shares in the three biggest German automakers fell Monday by as much as 3.7 percent after the Spiegel report, the Associated Press reported.
Mercedes has struggled to shake off allegations that it also tampered with emissions standards, an accusation the company has routinely rebuffed and said last week it would legally contest. Still, Daimler announced a surprise recall on Tuesday, following a meeting with German government officials last week to discuss emissions technology. Audi followed on Friday with its own recall to update the software in Euro 5 and Euro 6 engines.
European carmakers are shoring up diesel because they need it to bridge the gap between tightening rules for greenhouse-gas emissions and ramping up electric-car plans. Authorities are scrutinizing the technology after Volkswagen admitted in September 2015 to rigging cars to cheat on emissions tests.
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It costs more in wear and tear on a battery to discharge/charge, than to buy gasoline with the equivalent amount of energy. By a factor of about 4.
Even before you start to pay for the electricity.
The press has taken to calling collaboration collusion.
good
tempest in a teapot.
stupid epa tier 4 rules hurt US locomotive industry too.
Ah ha! German auto makers, surrender! We have you dead to rights, on suspicion of intent to collude!
My VW Caravelle just passed it’s MOT (UK road worthiness inspection) test with the tester saying he was impressed at how low the emission readings were which for a 21 year old vehicle was good to hear.
What amuses me is that it doesn’t have all the stuff that fowls up modern diesel engined vehicles.
It’s part of the reason why I keep it as everything is mechanical “I can fix mechanical” when electronics goes wrong there’s not so many fixes other than replacement at high cost.
James Bull
The same applies to me. 1993 Golf, second hand, 85k miles on the clock, automatic gear and running like blazes.
Cheating on the emissions test might mean that the prerequesites cannot be met otherwise. The narrative of man-made global warming did inspire the rulers to -completely unecessarily- tighten the reins on the car industry. If we agree that CAGW is a Mann-made hoax, we should not complain about the car industry ignoring this non-existing threat as well. I don’t drive a German Diesel car, and I do give a darn whether they cheated or not.