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Daimler agrees to U.S. diesel settlements worth nearly $3 billion

Published 13/08/2020, 17:47
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO:  Daimler AG's annual news conference in Stuttgart

By David Shepardson and Emma Thomasson

WASHINGTON/BERLIN (Reuters) - Daimler (DE:DAIGn) said on Thursday it has reached agreements costing nearly $3 billion (£2.3 billion) to settle civil investigations by U.S. regulators and lawsuits from vehicle owners stemming from a long-running probe into software to cheat diesel emissions tests.

The settlements in principle address civil and environmental claims tied to 250,000 U.S. diesel passenger cars and vans in the United States and include claims from the Environmental Protection Agency, Justice Department, California Air Resources Board (CARB) and the California Attorney General’s Office.

The German carmaker said it expects the costs of the settlements with U.S. authorities will total $1.5 billion, settling with owners will cost about $700 million and "further expenses of a mid three-digit-million EUR (euro) amount to fulfill requirements of the settlements."

A spokesman for CARB confirmed the settlement "will reach $1.5 billion and affects 250,000 vehicles nationwide." The agency said it would disclose more details after binding consent decrees with the U.S. government agencies are filed with a U.S. district court, currently anticipated for mid-September.

The maker of Mercedes-Benz cars said it expects an impact on its free cash flow over the next three years as a result, with the main impact within the next 12 months.

Daimler said previously it was the subject of a Justice Department criminal investigation but the status of that probe was not addressed Thursday.

Diesel vehicles have come under scrutiny in the United States since Volkswagen (DE:VOWG_p) admitted in 2015 to installing secret software on 580,000 U.S. vehicles that allowed them to emit up to 40 times legally allowable emissions.

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Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV (MI:FCHA) in 2019 reached a settlement worth about $800 million to resolve claims by regulators and owners that it used illegal software that produced false results on diesel-emissions tests, but still faces an ongoing criminal probe.

In total, Volkswagen agreed to pay more than $25 billion in the United States for claims from owners, environmental regulators, states and dealers. VW also ended sales of diesel passenger vehicles in the United States.

Latest comments

Run..... all diesel car maker, especially germany for your cars are outstanding
this is actually a blessing in disguise for german car makers.. this will male them stronger and have better inovations for that is how inovation begins- it‘s through struggles company comes out stronger with dynamic ideas- germans are very strong people mentally- it‘s actually a good pattern for inovation - hahaha lol
Since the dieselgate scandal broke, industry and politicians have backed electric cars heavily. BMW plans to build a fully electric version of the Mini at its Cowley plant near Oxford from 2019. Volvo has announced that from the same year, all its new models will have an electric motor. VW has earmarked €70bn (£62bn) to produce battery-powered versions of all models by 2030.
It has never been a scandal ever for all diesel cars has always been same but trump targeted german cars but he is a ***en guy
CNN: Diesel is a dirty word among car buyers following the so-called dieselgate scandal in 2015, when it emerged that Volkswagen had cheated regulators and misled customers by using software to suppress emissions of nitrogen oxide during vehicle tests. Since the scandal erupted, carmakers have rushed towards production of “cleaner” electric cars.
The British cannot even maintain of its car plants - sold Rolls Royce then Vauxhall to France but here reuters the engllish boy happy to destroy the more another country’s car industry————-______Plummeting sales of diesel cars have driven Britain’s auto industry to the brink of a crisis, with the axe falling on thousands of manufacturing jobs, and dealerships threatened with savage restructuring.Vauxhall, which was bought by Peugeot’s parent company PSA last year, last week revealed plans to slash UK dealerships from 326 to about 200 as part of the French owner’s drive to return the loss-making Vauxhall and Opel marques to profitability. Also this week, it emerged that Nissan is preparing to cut hundreds of jobs at its Sunderland plant, the largest car factory in the UK, amid falling diesel demand.
sack all the us soldier in germany for they are not doing any job there. russia is an excuse for the us to keep them there- they are there for the us own interest but not germany. sack all the us soldiers - waste of money
mafia us- comes shortly when germany refuses to bsn huawei.... you have to be an underdog to the us but germany never ever succumb to trump‘s nonsense. this news is new to daimler
Rolls Royce has been a big problem for the uk to be managed and therefore was so desperate to sell to the chinese
Hey... where from this news- apparently over 2 years old but why destroy germany- why reuters—- bloomberg brought this old news also today but why? Some jealousy
Daimler: We are convinced that diesel will continue to be a fixed element of the drive-system mix in the future, not least due to their low CO₂ emissions. It makes more sense to improve diesel than to ban it, because the biggest lever for reducing consumption and emissions is still the energy-efficient combustion engine. It will remain the backbone of our mobility for many years to come. - daimler response to manipulators trying to destroy the German car industry but hey- they all will go to battery and lets see whats next. So much bad people in this world but they will all die first in suffering for destroying companies
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