EU knew diesels flunked tests

Records show officials studied vehicles that fell short

A worker prepares a new turbo diesel engine for fitting to a Volkswagen AG Caddy van on the production line at the VW plant in Poznan, Poland, in December.
A worker prepares a new turbo diesel engine for fitting to a Volkswagen AG Caddy van on the production line at the VW plant in Poznan, Poland, in December.

LONDON -- European officials knew that Volkswagen diesels fell short of pollution limits years before the company became engulfed in an emissions cheating scandal, records show.

And they also knew that diesels across the industry had problems that were similar, if not worse.

The European Commission, the European Union's executive branch, performed road tests on emissions from seven diesel cars starting in 2007, but it did not reveal what cars or manufacturers had been involved in the tests when it published the results in 2011 and 2013. Internal documents obtained through the European equivalent of a Freedom of Information request, along with records recently made public by the commission, detail the results.

The tests were not intended to identify carmakers violating the rules. Rather, they were aimed at identifying the shortcomings of conducting pollution tests solely in laboratories and also assessing equipment used to test emissions on the road.

The vehicles were tested by the Joint Research Center, a branch of the European Commission that bills itself as an "in-house science service." Nina Kajander, a spokesman for the center, cautioned against drawing conclusions from specific models that were tested.

"It must be noted that the vehicles used for the research cannot be considered representative of the general level of emissions by the models in question," she said in an email. "These were scientific studies designed to compare different methodologies for measuring emissions in laboratories against those measured on the road."

Acting on the results, European policymakers developed a plan to require mandatory tests to measure emissions on the road with portable devices. The plan was approved by the European Parliament last week, though it has been criticized after automakers lobbied successfully to weaken the tests.

The testing found what independent research has shown for some time: Diesels are emitting far more nitrogen oxides on the road than in laboratory tests. Nitrogen oxides lead to respiratory and cardiovascular illnesses, smog and acid rain, and cause premature deaths.

A VW Golf that met regulatory standards when tested in the lab exceeded those limits by nearly three times when tested on the road. But that was markedly better than a car made by Renault, the Clio, whose emissions exceeded regulatory limits by as much as seven times.

A Fiat Bravo and a Fiat Punto and a BMW 120d were among the other diesels tested, and had emissions ranging from two to four times higher than regulatory standards when tested on the road.

Notably, the Golf that was tested was a version of the car produced before VW began installing software aimed at cheating emissions tests. A second Volkswagen tested, a Passat, was a prototype made by VW with the latest filtration technology and that was lent to the commission specifically for the tests.

More recent testing by the commission of several cars designed to meet the latest European standards, known as Euro 6, showed that they averaged four times higher than regulatory standards when tested on the road. Some were eight to nine times higher, the commission said.

Volkswagen declined to comment. The company includes the brands Audi and Porsche, and SEAT and Skoda in Europe. Renault did not respond to requests for comment.

In September, VW admitted installing software in 11 million diesel vehicles worldwide that was designed to detect when a car was being tested in a laboratory, triggering a cleaner emissions setting. U.S. regulators, with the help of independent researchers, discovered that VW emissions on the road exceeded by as much as 40 times the American limits for nitrogen oxides, limits that are stricter than those in Europe.

A majority of cars affected by the scandal are in Europe, where there is frustration over the company's handling of the crisis. Among other things, VW is making goodwill payments to American customers, but not to people in Europe.

Some other companies have also had to answer questions about why their diesels fail to live up to expectations. Carlos Ghosn, the chief executive of Renault-Nissan, recently defended his company against suggestions that it also cheated on emissions tests, after Renault said it would recall 15,000 diesels to fix a faulty emissions filter. And Fiat Chrysler said last week that it would update the software in many of its diesels to improve their emissions performance.

Last month, the European Commission also proposed a general overhaul of how testing was done in Europe. As part of the proposal, the commission could for the first time conduct its own spot checks of emissions from car models on the road, echoing the testing that the Environmental Protection Agency does in the United States. Aspects of the proposals, however, could face opposition from the Parliament and member states.

A Section on 02/08/2016

Upcoming Events