The sign of German car company Audi is attached on the engine of a TDI, a turbo diesel model.
Berlin - The company is under huge pressure to address the worst business crisis in its 78-year history.
Published: Wed 30 Sep 2015, 12:00 AM
Updated: Wed 30 Sep 2015, 10:23 AM
Volkswagen announced plans on Tuesday to refit up to 11 million vehicles and overhaul its namesake brand following the scandal over its rigging of emissions tests.
New Chief Executive Matthias Mueller said the German carmaker would ask customers "in the next few days" to have diesel vehicles that contained illegal software refitted, a move which some analysts have said could cost more than $6.5 billion.
Europe's biggest carmaker has admitted cheating in diesel emissions tests in the United States and Germany's transport minister says it also manipulated them in Europe, where Volkswagen sells about 40 per cent of its vehicles.
The company is under huge pressure to address the worst business crisis in its 78-year history, which has wiped more than a third off its market value, sent shock waves through the global car market and could harm Germany's economy.
"We are facing a long trudge and a lot of hard work," Mueller told a closed-door gathering of about 1,000 top managers at Volkswagen's Wolfsburg headquarters late on Monday.
"We will only be able to make progress in steps and there will be setbacks," he said, according to a text seen by Reuters.
Volkswagen did not say how the planned refit would make cars with the 'cheat' software comply with regulations, or how this might affect vehicles' mileage or efficiency, which are important considerations for customers.
Manipulating emissions results allowed Volkswagen to keep down engine costs in a 'clean diesel' strategy that was popular in Europe and at the heart of a drive to improve US results. Mueller was appointed CEO on Friday to replace Martin Winterkorn. German prosecutors said on Monday they were investigating Winterkorn over allegations of fraud.
Details have emerged gradually of how many were made by which VW division. Guenther Scherelis, a spokesman for the commercial vehicles unit - which makes vans and pickups - on Tuesday confirmed that 1.8 million of its vehicles were affected. He didn't give further details.
Spanish subsidiary SEAT said it fitted 700,000 vehicles with the EA 189 diesel engines in which Volkswagen has said there are "discrepancies."
SEAT said the cars were sold worldwide and it was seeking to determine how many were sold in each market. Also fitted with the suspect software were 5 million VW brand cars, 2.1 million Audis and 1.2 million Skodas.- Agencies
SEAT and Volkswagen-Audi Spain on Tuesday ordered a suspension of sales of all SEAT, Volkswagen, Audi, Skoda and Volkswagen commercial vehicles with the EA 189 diesel engine. It said this decision would affect 3,320 vehicles currently in stock.
The crisis is an embarrassment for Germany, which has for years held up Volkswagen as a model of its engineering prowess and has lobbied against some tighter regulations on automakers. The German car industry employs more than 750,000 people and is a major source of export income.
Germany's KBA watchdog had set Volkswagen an October 7 deadline for it to present a plan to bring diesel emissions into line with the law. Germany's transport ministry said on Tuesday it had set up an investigative commission and it was holding talks with the US Environmental Protection Agency over the scandal.
Investors are impatient for answers too.
A survey of 62 institutions by investment banking advisory firm Evercore ISI found around two-thirds said it would not be possible to invest in Volkswagen over the next six months. - Reuters
if costs, fines, legal and criminal proceedings were outstanding or inadequately quantified.
VW's brand image has also slumped this month, market research firm YouGov said on Tuesday, citing the results of a survey of about 2,000 consumers.
Volkswagen said previously about 11 million vehicles were fitted with software capable of cheating emissions tests, including five million at its VW brand, 2.1 million at luxury brand Audi, 1.2 million at Czech division Skoda and 1.8 million light commercial vehicles.
Refitting 11 million cars would be among the biggest recalls in history by a single automaker, similar in scale to Toyota's recall of more than 10 million vehicles between 2009 and 2010 over acceleration problems, though dwarfed by the number recalled by multiple carmakers due to faulty Takata airbags.
Volkswagen sold 10.1 million vehicles in the whole of 2014.
The company said last week it would set aside ?6.5 billion ($7.3 billion) in its third-quarter accounts to help cover the cost of the crisis.
But analysts think that may not be enough, as it faces potential fines from regulators and prosecutors, as well as lawsuits from cheated customers.
Sweden's chief prosecutor told Reuters on Tuesday he was considering whether to start a preliminary investigation into Volkswagen.
At 1205 GMT, Volkswagen shares were down 0.8 per cent at ?98.54.
Mueller also said Volkswagen's core VW division, struggling with high-fixed costs and low profit margins, would be given more autonomy, akin to the independence enjoyed by premium flagship brands Audi and Porsche.
Analysts have long urged the company to tackle the underperformance of its core mass-market brand, and in particular to dilute control from the centre which has been blamed for product delays and problems adapting to local markets.
Klaus Mohrs, the mayor of Wolfsburg where Volkswagen employs around 70,000 people, said on Monday he expected a sharp decline in business taxes as a result of the crisis, and announced an immediate budget freeze as well as a hiring ban.
The emissions scandal has sent ripples through the global car market, with manufacturers fearing more costly regulations and a drop in diesel car sales.
The European Commission is working on outline plans to reform the European system for approving new models of cars by the end of the year.
Volkswagen's Belgian importer, D'Ieteren, said it would offer engine upgrades to 800 customers who had ordered a vehicle with a diesel engine that was likely to have been fitted with illegal software. The importer said it would pay for the expected two million euros cost. - Reuters