Volkswagen agrees to pay $1.6bn to settle US diesel claims

Car parts supplier Robert Bosch also agrees to pay $327.5m to compensate owners

Volkswagen could be forced to pay as much as $4.04 billion - and much more in individual owner compensation - if regulators reject a fix entirely
Volkswagen could be forced to pay as much as $4.04 billion - and much more in individual owner compensation - if regulators reject a fix entirely

Volkswagen has agreed to pay at least $1.26 billion to fix or buy back nearly 80,000 polluting 3.0 litre diesel-engined vehicles – and could be forced to pay up to $4.04 billion if regulators don’t approve fixes for all vehicles, court documents filed late on Tuesday showed.

In December, VW said it had agreed to buy back 20,000 vehicles and expected to fix another 60,000. The settlement documents show that if regulators do not approve fixes, the German carmaker’s costs could jump dramatically.

Under the settlement, which must be approved by a US judge, owners of 3.0 litre vehicles who opt for fixes will get compensation of between $7,000 and $16,000 from Volkswagen if emissions fixes are approved in a timely fashion – and the automaker will pay another $500 if the fix affects a vehicle’s performance. Owners who opt for a buyback will get $7,500 on top of the value of the vehicle.

Volkswagen could be forced to pay as much as $4.04 billion – and much more in individual owner compensation – if regulators reject a fix entirely, according to the US Federal Trade Commission, which had sued VW and voted unanimously to back the deal.

READ MORE

The settlement is the last major hurdle to Volkswagen moving beyond its emissions scandal, though it still faces suits from some US states and investors.

Volkswagen Group of America chief executive Hinrich Woebcken said with the agreement all owners of polluting diesels "will have a resolution available to them. We will continue to work to earn back the trust of all our stakeholders."

VW has been barred from selling diesels in the United States since late 2015.

VW has agreed to repurchase the 2009-2012 Volkswagen and Audi 3.0 litre vehicles, but believes it will be able to fix the 2013-2016 Volkswagen, Audi, and Porsche 3.0 litre vehicles.

Bosch agreement

Separately, German car parts supplier Robert Bosch has agreed to pay $327.5 million to compensate owners of polluting US vehicles.

VW previously agreed to spend up to $10.03 billion to buy back up to 475,000 polluting 2.0 litre vehicles after it admitted it installed secret software to evade emissions controls.

Diesel car owners sued Bosch in 2015 claiming the company helped design secret “defeat-device” software that allowed VW to evade emissions rules and alleged Bosch was a “knowing and active participant” in Volkswagen’s decade-long scheme.

Under the agreement, Bosch will pay $163.3 million to address 2.0 litre vehicle claims, with most owners getting $350 each, while 3.0 litre owners will split $113.3 million. Most 3.0 litre owners will receive $1,500 from Bosch.

A federal judge in San Francisco will hold a hearing to approve the settlements on February 14th.

The lead lawyer for the vehicle owners, Elizabeth Cabraser, said in statement the settlement provides "substantial benefits to both consumers and the environment."

VW earlier agreed to pay $225 million to offset the excess pollution from the 3.0 litre vehicles, on top of $2.7 billion it agreed to pay to offset 2.0 litre pollution.

The carmaker is set to plead guilty on February 24th in Detroit to three felony counts as part of a plea agreement with the US Justice Department to resolve the government's excess diesel emissions investigation.

As part of a $4.3 billion settlement with regulators, the German carmaker has agreed to sweeping reforms, new audits and oversight by an independent monitor for three years to resolve diesel emissions cheating investigations.

Under the settlement of charges, it admitted to installing secret software in US vehicles to allow them to emit up to 40 times the amount of legally permitted pollution, Volkswagen agreed to change the way it operates in the United States and other countries.

The Justice Department charged VW with conspiring for nearly 10 years to cheat on diesel emissions tests. The German carmaker agreed to pay $4.3 billion in US civil and criminal fines. It has also charged seven current and former VW executives with wrongdoing.

In total, VW has now agreed to spend up to $25 billion in the United States to address claims from owners, environmental regulators, US states and dealers, and offered to buy back about 500,000 polluting vehicles.

This week, Volkswagen topped Toyota as the world's largest automaker by sales.

Reuters