GM denies allegations that it cheats on diesel emissions

DETROIT — General Motors on Thursday denied allegations made in a lawsuit that the company's full-size diesel pickups cheat on emissions tests.

The lawsuit filed by lawyers for two truck owners in U.S. District Court in Detroit alleges that trucks with Duramax diesel engines have three devices on them that are rigged to allow more pollution on the road than during treadmill tests in the Environmental Protection Agency laboratory.

But GM called the allegations "baseless" and said in a statement it would vigorously defend itself.

"The Duramax Diesel Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra comply with all U.S. EPA and CARB [California Air Resources Board] emissions regulations," the company said in a statement.

The lawsuit apparently affected GM's stock price. Shares in the company fell almost 2 percent Thursday.

The lawsuit filed by the Hagens Berman firm of Seattle alleges the trucks emit two to five times the legal limit for harmful nitrogen oxide. Also named as a defendant is Robert Bosch LLC, which made GM's electronic diesel controls. Bosch said it is cooperating with government investigations into emissions cases and "defending its interests" in lawsuits.

Diesel engines have been under scrutiny worldwide since Volkswagen admitted that its diesel cars cheated on tests.

The complaint on behalf of the truck owners alleges that the devices were installed on diesel engines in the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra heavy-duty pickups. Two of the devices reduce emissions controls when the air temperature is above or below the range in government lab tests. The other reduces the level of emissions controls when the trucks are running continuously for 200 to 500 seconds. Government tests don't last that long, the lawsuit says.

The law firm estimates that there are 705,000 of the diesel pickups on U.S. roads.

Read Saturday's Arkansas Democrat-Gazette for full details.

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