U.S. approves Volkswagen’s $14.7 billion settlement
The plan for buybacks and a possible fix
covers car owners, the U.S. government and 44 states and will cost the
company about US$15.3 billion if the agreements are fully adopted. That
includes VW's US$603 million accord with the states that isn't part of
the settlement before U.S. District Court Judge Charles Breyer in San
Francisco.
"As it appears in your presentation today,
as it appeared when you filed your documents, that an enormous effort
has been devoted to achieving a series of goals," Breyer said Tuesday in
court, where he set a final approval hearing for Oct. 18. "I think from
what I've seen, those goals have been achieved, at least
preliminarily."
Tuesday's ruling advances Volkswagen's push
to resolve a flood of U.S. lawsuits springing from the
diesel-cheating scandal. Preliminary approval of the agreement
addressing VW and Audi models made since 2009 with 2.0-litre engines
still leaves the automaker without a settlement for 82,000 3.0 litre
diesel engines while also facing additional state lawsuits by attorneys
general in New
York, Massachusetts and Maryland that could add billions of dollars to
VW's tab.
The pact eats up almost all of the US$17.8
billion Volkswagen had set aside to cover the cost of the scandal
worldwide. In addition to investor class actions in the U.S. and
lawsuits in Germany and South Korea, the company faces criminal probes
in all three countries. The German carmaker took a 2.2 billion-euro
charge in the second quarter, chiefly related to legal risks in the U.S.
The company will report full earnings figures later this week.
"The parties believe that the proposed
settlement program will provide a fair, reasonable and adequate
resolution for affected Volkswagen and Audi customers," VW said in a
statement. The settlement before Breyer includes US$10 billion for
buybacks, as well as US$4.7 billion in government penalties and
remediation. With or without a fix, car owners who don't like the
buyback option may be able to keep driving the polluting cars in some
states.
Drivers who participate in the deal will get
at least US$5,100 each as part of a buyback program that will begin in
October and run through June 30, 2019, the deadline for the company to
get 85 per cent of cars recalled. If it fails to reach that benchmark,
it will have to pay US$85 million more into an environmental mitigation
trust for each percentage point of the shortfall. It will also have to
pay an additional US$13.5 million into the trust for each percentage
point it falls below the target in California.
Elizabeth Cabraser, lead lawyer for the
consumers, told the judge Tuesday "the money is a means to an end that
cannot be achieved without a number of parties working together, as they
have throughout the course of negotiations to accomplish a plan that
works together in the real world."
Nitrogen Oxide
The carmaker has yet to come up with a fix
for the cars emitting up to 40 times the allowable limit of nitrogen
oxide gases. The U.S. EPA and CARB must approve any fix proposed by VW.
So, far none of the fixes have met agencies' standards.
A Justice Department lawyer told the judge
Tuesday that VW is expected in August to submit a new proposal for
fixing the 3.0-litre engines.
VW is hiring 250 to 300 people to carry out
the settlement requirements, Sharon Nelles, a lawyer for the company,
told Breyer. VW will set up a hotline that will be available seven days a
week, she said.
US Approves Volkswagens 14.7 Billion Settlement................................ www.redlineautosales.ca/u-s--approves-volkswagen-s--14-7-billion-settlement.htm
No comments:
Post a Comment