VW says US 'Dieselgate' settlement not to be replicated in Europe
[BERLIN] Volkswagen's CEO has rejected calls for the carmaker to compensate customers in Europe over the 'Dieselgate' emissions scandal along the lines of its US$15 billion deal in the United States, telling a German newspaper a similar settlement would be inappropriate and unaffordable.
Europe's Industry Commissioner Elzbieta Bienkowska last week called on Volkswagen to also compensate European owners of its diesel-powered cars, saying it would be unfair for them to be treated differently from US customers just because of a different legal system. "We have a different situation here (in Europe)," Matthias Mueller was quoted as saying by Welt am Sonntag.
Mr Mueller also said while VW was on a solid financial footing, replicating the US deal in Europe would be tough for VW to cope with financially. "You don't have to be a mathematician to realise that compensation at arbitrarily high levels would overwhelm Volkswagen," he said.
Mr Mueller said he had spoken to Bienkowska in Brussels this week about his views. "In the U.S. the (emission) limits are stricter, which makes the fix more complicated. And taking part in the buyback is voluntary (for customers), which is not the case in Germany, for example," he said.
Because the US authorities want as many cars to be bought back as possible, VW also has to offer customers incentives, meaning the situation is not comparable, he added.
REUTERS
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Transport & Logistics
Heathrow faces further strike action in May from ground staff
Boeing bid for Spirit AeroSystems hits snag over Airbus assets
Tesla to cut 400 jobs in Germany via voluntary programme
GE Aerospace raises earnings goal on strong engine sales
UPS profit beats estimates as cost cuts offset weak delivery demand
General Motors beats quarterly results targets, raises forecast