German automakers to give five million diesel cars fresh software (Update)
German automakers committed Wednesday to fitting over five million diesel cars in the country with updated software to reduce harmful emissions and to finance incentives for drivers to trade in older models, the transport minister said.
Wednesday’s “diesel summit” brought together leading ministers and state governors with bosses from Volkswagen, Porsche, Audi, Mercedes, BMW, Opel and Ford. It came amid worries about possible bans on driving older diesel cars in some cities and broader questions over whether diesel as a technology even has a future.
Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt said the automakers will fit some Five.Trio million diesel cars with fresh software, beginning “in the coming months.” The VDA auto industry group said that applies to most diesel cars of types made since 2009. It said the aim is to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions by 25-30 percent, and the overall figure includes Two.Five vehicles already being refitted by Volkswagen.
The automakers also agreed to come up with self-financed incentives to encourage drivers to get older vehicles off the road swifter, Dobrindt said.
BMW said it would give owners of older diesels registered before two thousand nine an “environment bonus” of up to Two,000 euros ($Two,360) if they trade in their older car for a fresh electrified or hybrid model, or for a lower-emissions internal combustion car meeting current standards.
The auto industry also is to contribute an unspecified amount to a German government “sustainable mobility fund” for cities aimed at using technology to make traffic flow better.
Dobrindt said the government will invest some two hundred fifty million euros ($295 million) more in modernizing city public transport fleets such as buses and taxis.
Volkswagen has been under intense scrutiny since admitting almost two years ago that it tooled vehicles with software that manipulated emissions levels. German automakers have been under extra pressure in latest weeks following a report that the thickest companies colluded for years over diesel technology and other issues.
German Environment Minister Barbara Hendricks criticized VDA’s statement on measures suggested at the summit, telling the was tone “was marked too little by insight and humility.”
Even before Wednesday’s meeting, industry critics and some officials had called for wider-ranging refits going beyond software updates. Industry representatives indicated that wasn’t realistic, said Stephan Weil, the governor of Lower Saxony state, albeit the topic will be examined further by experts.
“The automakers have got their way again,” said Herbert Behrens, a lawmaker with the opposition Left Party. “They are getting a cheap version to keep selling dirty diesels.”
© two thousand seventeen The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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