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Tuesday, March 19, 2024
March 19, 2024

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VW’s top U.S. executive to testify to Congressional panel

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WASHINGTON — Volkswagen’s top U.S.-based executive is expected to testify before Congress Thursday that he first learned in 2014 of emissions problems with the German automaker’s four-cylinder diesel cars.

But in prepared remarks posted Wednesday, Volkswagen Group of America CEO Michael Horn doesn’t directly address when he was first told his company had developed on-board computer software designed to deceive tests.

Horn is scheduled to testify before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, which was provided an advance copy of the executive’s written testimony. It will be the first appearance on Capitol Hill by Horn, a German and veteran VW manager who took over the reins of the brand’s American subsidiary last year.

After the written version of Horn’s remarks became public, Volkswagen spokeswoman Jeannine Ginivan told The Associated Press that Horn would testify today that he only learned of the cheating software “over the past several weeks.”

In the written testimony, Horn echoes prior statements by the company’s global CEO apologizing for the cheating, which hid illegal levels of pollution produced by nearly 500,000 “clean diesel” cars sold in the U.S. since 2008.

“On behalf of our company, and my colleagues in Germany, I would like to offer a sincere apology for Volkswagen’s use of a software program that served to defeat the regular emissions testing regime,” Horn will say, according to his prepared remarks. “These events are deeply troubling. I did not think that something like this was possible at the Volkswagen Group. We have broken the trust of our customers, dealerships, and employees, as well as the public and regulators.”

Horn will also announce that VW is withdrawing applications seeking government emissions certifications for its 2016 model Jettas, Golfs, Passats and Beetles with diesel engines. The vehicles already shipped to the U.S. will remain quarantined in ports.

Following the delivery of his prepared remarks, Horn is expected to face a blistering round of follow-up questions from members of the committee.

“The American people want to know why these devices were in place, how the decision was made to install them and how they went undetected for so long,” the panel’s Republican chairman, Rep. Tim Murphy of Pennsylvania, said in a statement.

Also scheduled to testify Thursday are two officials at the Environmental Protection Agency who oversee emissions testing and compliance with clean air rules.

VW first confessed the deception to U.S. regulators on Sept. 3, more than a year after researchers at West Virginia University first published a study showing the real-world emissions of the company’s Jetta and Passat models where far higher than allowed. The same cars had met emissions standards when tested in the lab.

VW was able to fool the EPA because the agency only tested the cars on treadmill-like devices called dynamometers and didn’t use portable test equipment on real roads. The software in the cars’ engine-control computers checked the speed, steering wheel position, air pressure and other factors to determine when dynamometer tests were under way. It then turned on pollution controls that reduced the output of nitrogen oxides that contribute to smog and other pollution.

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