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Wednesday, 23 September 2015
VW scandal caused nearly 1m tonnes of extra pollution, analysis shows
Volkswagen’s rigging of emissions tests for 11m cars means they may
be responsible for nearly 1m tonnes of air pollution every year, roughly
the same as the UK’s combined emissions for all power stations,
vehicles, industry and agriculture, a Guardian analysis suggests.
The potential scale of the scandal puts further pressure on
Volkswagen’s board and its chief executive, Martin Winterkorn. The
company’s executive committee plans to meet on Wednesday to discuss the
affair and to agree the agenda of a full board meeting scheduled for
Friday, amid reports that Winterkorn could be replaced.
The carmaker has recalled 482,000 VW and Audi brand cars in the US
after the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) found models with Type
EA 189 engines had been fitted with a device designed to reduce
emissions of nitrous oxides (NOx) under testing conditions.
A Guardian analysis found those US vehicles would have spewed between
10,392 and 41,571 tonnes of toxic gas into the air each year, if they
had covered the average annual US mileage. If they had complied with EPA
standards, they would have emitted just 1,039 tonnes of NOx each year
in total.
The company admitted the device may have been fitted to 11m of its vehicles
worldwide. If that proves correct, VW’s defective vehicles could be
responsible for between 237,161 and 948,691 tonnes of NOx emissions each
year, 10 to 40 times the pollution standard for new models in the US.
Western Europe’s biggest power station, Drax in the UK, emits 39,000
tonnes of NOx each year.
Germany’s Tagesspiegel newspaper said on Tuesday that VW’s board
would replace Winterkorn, who has led the company since early 2007, with
Matthias Mueller, who runs the company’s Porsche sports car division.
Volkswagen rejected Tagesspiegel’s report and Winterkorn continued to
ask for the public’s trust on Tuesday, saying the scandal was caused by
“the bad mistakes of a few”. But Wednesday’s meeting will prove crucial
to how VW responds.
The company’s shares fell 10% as the German stock market opened on
Wednesday although recouped some early losses. A thrid - some €25bn - of
the company’s stock market value had already been lost since Friday
when the emissions scandal first emerged.
New York and other state attorney generals are forming a group to
investigate the scandal, New York attorney general Eric Schneiderman
said, adding to a series of investigations in the US, Europe and Asia that threaten to sap Volkswagen’s resources and impose large penalties.
In the US, just 3% of passenger cars are diesel
compared with almost half in the EU. Prof Martin Williams of King’s
College London said the US’s low percentage of diesel cars meant higher
diesel emissions in some cars would have a “limited effect” on air
quality there.
“[In the US it would be] nowhere near the effect it would
have in this country and in the rest of Europe for that matter,” he
said. In the UK, Williams added, emissions from diesel cars cause
roughly 5,800 premature deaths each year. “If you were to make the cars
emit at the legal limit you could reduce those deaths by at least a
factor of two and maybe more. Maybe a factor of five.”
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The Clean Air in London campaign
called for a royal commission to investigate carmakers’ activities in
the UK. “Diesel is without doubt the biggest public health catastrophe
in UK history. Even the black plague didn’t affect everyone in the
population,” said its founder, Simon Birkett.
Not all NOx emissions – which include nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and nitrogen oxide (NO) – are dangerous. But an increasing proportion of the toxic NO2 gas has been detected in EU diesel emissions. A study in the British Medical Journal in May found that short-term exposure to NO2 increased the number of premature deaths from heart and lung disease by 0.88% and 1.09%.
For years, UK air pollution measurements have failed to show improvements in air quality, even as standards have tightened.
“Since 2003 scientists have been saying things are not right. It’s
not just the VW story, this is part of something much bigger,” said Dr
Gary Fuller, also of King’s College. “It has a serious public health
impact.”
Last week, a report from NGO Transport & Environment
found that Europe’s testing regime was allowing nine out of every 10
new diesel vehicles to breach EU limits. Testing regimes in the EU are
known to fail to pick up “real world” emissions because cars are not
driven in the same way in the laboratory as on the road. Some studies
suggest the discrepancy may be up to seven times the legal limit.
Williams said being able to mask their NOx emissions would also
enable carmakers to pass carbon emissions tests more easily as there was
a trade-off between NOx and CO2 in diesel engines.
Catherine Bearder MEP, a lead negotiator on the EU’s new air quality
laws, said: “Manufacturers in the US have been caught out, but we know
that pollution limits are also being breached in Europe ... Unless we
take action, thousands of lives will continue to be tragically cut short
by air pollution.”
We totally screwed up’, says US Volkswagen chief
In a sign that the emissions scandal will not remain restricted to
the US, a Venice court will next month hear a case against VW and Fiat
for misleading test advertising.
The Italian consumer rights group Altroconsumo is due to press its case for a class action suit against VW and Fiat
on 2 October, after laboratory tests showed that fuel consumption and
CO2 emissions from the VW Golf 1.6 and Fiat Panda 1.2 were up to 50%
higher than claimed.
Altroconsumo wants the German car firm to pay damages of €502 (£365)
to the owner of a VW Golf in a case that raises the possibility of
widescale compensation payouts by the car industry.
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Monique
Goyens, the director of the European consumer rights umbrella group
BEUC, which includes Altroconsumo, called for an investigation by the
European commission into the use of software programmes to “game”
European emissions tests.
“The VW scandal has compounded our concern that underhand tactics are
also being used in fuel consumption and CO2 testing programmes in
Europe,” she said. “One of the problems in the EU, unlike in the US, is
the absence of a market surveillance system which would require
independent in-use conformity testing. The EU needs to implement such a
system to restore trust amongst consumers.”
On Tuesday, the Italian government launched an investigation into VW’s emissions testing regime.
Know your NOx
Nitric Oxide (chemical name NO) and nitrogen dioxide (chemical name NO2) are both found in diesel fumes and are collectively referred to as nitrogen oxides, or NOx.
NOx gases both cause some environmental problems, but it is really only NO2that causes health problems.
High concentrations of nitrogen dioxide are harmful because they
cause inflammation of the airways. But it can also react to form other
secondary pollutants, such as ozone, which create their own health
problems.
Nitrous oxide is N2O, or laughing gas. This is not found in diesel fumes.
How the VW crisis unfolded
Last Friday – the discovery The EPA say 482,000 US VW vehicles may have emitted ...
... each year if they were all being judged against the 2016 model emissions standards Monday – the fallout Volkswagen shares fall 12.9% overnight Tuesday – the admission
11m cars are affected globally, so assuming mileages worldwide are
similar to mileages in the US, VW’s defective vehicles could be
responsible for ...
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