Volkswagen Ordered To Recall 500K Vehicles Over Its Own Malicious Programming

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Volkswagen Scandal

Volkswagen Ordered To Recall 500K Vehicles Over Its Own Malicious Programming


WASHINGTON The Obama administration on Friday directed Volkswagen to recall nearly a half million cars from the road, saying the German automaker used software intentionally designed to circumvent environmental standards for reducing smog.

The Environmental Protection Agency issued the company a notice of violation and accused the company of breaking the law by installing software known as a defeat device in 4-cylinder Volkswagen and Audi vehicles from model years 2009-15. The device is programmed to detect when the car is undergoing official emissions testing, and to only turn on full emissions control systems during that testing. Those controls are turned off during normal driving situations, when the vehicles pollute far more heavily than reported by the manufacturer, the E.P.A. said.

Using a defeat device in cars to evade clean air standards is illegal and a threat to public health, said Cynthia Giles, the E.P.A.s assistant administrator for the Office of Enforcement and Compliance. Working closely with the California Air Resources Board, E.P.A. is committed to making sure that all automakers play by the same rules. E.P.A. will continue to investigate these very serious violations.

The software was designed to conceal the cars emissions of the pollutant nitrogen oxide, which contributes to the creation of ozone and smog. The pollutants are linked to a range of health problems, including asthma attacks and other respiratory diseases.

The state of California has issued a separate notice of violation to the company. California, the E.P.A. and the Justice Department are working together on an investigation of the allegations.

The allegations cover roughly 482,000 diesel passenger cars sold in the United States since 2009.


Affected diesel models include the 2009-15 Volkswagen Jetta, 200915 Beetle, 200915 Golf, 2014-15 Passat and 2009-15 Audi A3.

The notice of violation is part of a broader, more aggressive enforcement effort by federal environmental regulators on the auto industry. Analysts said it was meant to send a clear message to automakers that they will be harshly treated for compromising federal rules.

It follows a November 2014 announcement of the administrations largest-ever penalty for a violation of the Clean Air Act, in which the government fined the Korean automakers Hyundai Motor and Kia Motors a combined $300 million as part of a settlement for overstating vehicle fuel-economy standards on 1.2 million cars.

They want to make it clear that theyre going to crack down on cheaters, said Frank ODonnell, president of the environmental advocacy group Clean Air Watch. Theyre cheating not only car buyers but the breathing public. They want to lay down the law, enforce the law, and show theyre not going to tolerate cheaters. The laws and regulation are only as good as the enforcement.
 
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I always wondered why Mazda skyactivD couldn't pass US emissions but VW could? This probably explains it.
 
I know this is probably a minor point, but whatever happened to the notion that one (even VW!) is innocent until proven guilty? Oh that's right; that doesn't apply to out-of-control regulatory behemoths like the EPA and CARB! BTW craigo, WSJ online articles are not readable without a subscription.
 
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"Volkswagen, whose brands include the luxury Audi lineup, may face fines or other penalties, the EPA said. The maximum Clean Air Act violation is $37,500 per vehicle, meaning Volkswagen's fine could technically be as high as $18 billion. What's more, the scandal could expose Volkswagen to lawsuits and penalties for marketing its cars under the "Clean Diesel" moniker. An hour after the EPA announcement, the automaker's website still contained the "Clean Diesel" branding. About 20% of Volkswagen's vehicle sales are diesel engines, AutoPacific analyst Dave Sullivan said."
 
I know this is probably a minor point, but whatever happened to the notion that one (even VW!) is innocent until proven guilty? Oh that's right; that doesn't apply to out-of-control regulatory behemoths like the EPA and CARB! BTW craigo, WSJ online articles are not readable without a subscription.

I thought imported cars were taxed partly due to emissions/mpg figures. If so than VW may potentially be evading taxes by altering these figures. This accusation by the EPA almost sounds like an April Fools joke. that said this isn't the first time VW pulled something similar: http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpres...6946eeaadcfa982b8525702100777c0e!opendocument
 
If this is true... I would think Volkswagen will be hit with a pretty expensive fine to gain an exemption on these vehicles that would never have passed emissions in the first place.

Anyone have any thoughts on things they could do to make them clean? And at what cost? Reliability... less MPG, etc? or simply?

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http://www.startribune.com/epa-says-vw-intentionally-violates-clean-air-standards/328208031/

"The Volkswagens likely perform better with the emissions controls defeated than they do with them on, said Aaron Bragman, Detroit bureau chief for the Cars.com automotive shopping and research site. Otherwise, he said, there would be no reason to have a setting that turns on the controls for tests and turns them off for regular driving.

"Obviously it's changing the way the engine operates somehow that may not be pleasing to consumers," he said. "It would follow that it would put it into a very different feel in terms of operation of the vehicle.""
 
Anyone have any thoughts on things they could do to make them clean? And at what cost? Reliability... less MPG, etc? or simply?

First thing that comes to mind would be the addition of a downstream urea injection device and recalibration of the emissions system. Which would cost thousands per vehicle if it were even possible!
 
I know this is probably a minor point, but whatever happened to the notion that one (even VW!) is innocent until proven guilty? Oh that's right; that doesn't apply to out-of-control regulatory behemoths like the EPA and CARB! BTW craigo, WSJ online articles are not readable without a subscription.

I don't have a subscription, I got the link from google news and it works for me...

EDIT: For some reason when linked from here it asks for a sub.
 
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Didn't someone here mention something about how VW was politicking to "block" Mazda from bringing their skyactivD cars to the US?
 
https://www.yahoo.com/autos/volkswagen-charged-with-hacking-482000-diesels-to-129357726737.html

As described by the EPA and CARB, the Volkswagen violation was no accident. In May 2014, researchers at a West Virginia University lab found higher-than-allowable levels of emissions during testing of a 2013 Passat and 2014 Jetta diesel. When asked by the agencies, VW said the differences were due to testing flaws and how the vehicles were being driven.

CARB ran its own follow-up tests, and continued to find irregularities. VW issued a preliminary recall in December 2014, but testing still found high pollutant levels. Only after the agencies threatened to withhold certification for VW’s 2016 model-year diesels—which would have kept them from going on sale—did the automaker reveal the presence of the software switch.

That switch had two modes, which VW calls “road calibration” and “dyno calibration.” Only in “dyno” mode, which monitored for the precise conditions EPA and other agencies would use to test emissions, do the engine’s full emission controls go into effect. At all other times, the diesels’ software uses the “road” mode.
 
Reading on the Internet from actual (mostly pissed) VW diesel owners, they received a letter in the mail to take their car in for ECM software to be updated for environmental reasons.

Busy thread as expected over on tdiclub forums.
 
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