Off the wire
Chinese construction group has faith in Brazil, plans to boost investments  • Venezuela's assembly to open trial against President Maduro  • Chicago agricultural commodities close mixed  • Giant Panda-themed contest held to mark 45th anniversary of Belgium-China ties  • France keen to boost trade with Cuba  • UN agency reports start of first voluntary returns of refugee families to Myanmar from Thailand  • One million cholera vaccines arrive in Haiti, UN says  • U.S. remains committed to denuclearization of Korean Peninsula: State Department  • Interview: Cultural exchanges strengthen ties between China and Mexico  • Some 9,000 Iraqis displaced in military operation in Mosul: UN relief wing  
You are here:   Home

2nd LD: Federal judge in SF approves Volkswagen diesel car emissions settlement

Xinhua, October 26, 2016 Adjust font size:

A federal judge based in San Francisco approved on Tuesday a settlement between Volkswagen AG (VW) and U.S. owners of cars made by the U.S. automaker with 2-liter diesel engines dating to 2009.

Under the terms of the settlement approved by Judge Charles Breyer of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, VW will spend up to 10.033 billion U.S. dollars to either buy the polluting vehicles with "defeat devices" back or fix them and compensate about 475,000 U.S. owners.

Volkswagen admitted in September last year that it programmed the vehicles to turn on emission controls during legally mandated tests and turn them off while on the road, emitting up to 40 times the legal limit of nitrogen oxide. Worldwide, about 11 million vehicles were installed with the device to fool tests.

In addition to reaching the settlement in late June, the company agreed to spend 2.7 billion dollars over three years to fund projects aimed at reducing emissions of nitrogen oxide in states across the United States plus 2 billion dollars over 10 years to fund programs designed to promote electric vehicles or other zero-emission options.

However, the deals only cover Volkswagens with 2.0-liter, four-cylinder diesel engines, including Jetta, Beetle, Audi A3, Golf, and Passat, sold between 2009 and 2015. Owners can option to allow VW to buy back their vehicles at retail value as of September 2015, prior to the public disclosure of the emissions cheating scandal, or to get their vehicles repaired for free.

They do not cover more than 80,000 Volkswagen, Audi and Porsche vehicles with 3-liter, six-cylinder diesel engines sold in the United States during the same model years.

VW will begin buying back vehicles with 2-liter diesel engines after Judge Breyer's approval on Tuesday, and is expected to start proposing fixes and acquire approvals from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the California Air Resources Board in November. According to court documents, most vehicle owners will get 5,100 to 10,000 dollars in compensation, and VW must buy back or repair 85 percent of the 475,000 vehicles by June 30, 2019, or face penalties of 100 million dollars for every percentage point it falls below 85 percent.

About 3,500 U.S. owners have reportedly opted out the current settlement and most likely will sue the automaker, arguably No. 2 of the world.

Court schedule indicates that Judge Breyer will hold a status conferernce on November 3 and a final fairness hearing for VW's settlement with its U.S. dealers on January 18, 2017. Endit