Volkswagen to recall 11 million cars

Volkswagen is set to recall around 11 million diesel-powered vehicles.

Volkswagen is set to recall around 11 million diesel-powered vehicles.

Published Sep 29, 2015

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Wolfsburg, Germany - Volkswagen has signalled that it plans recall up to 11 million vehicles as it tries to address the scandal over its admission that it cheated US diesel emissions tests.

New Chief Executive Matthias Mueller said the German carmaker had drawn up a “comprehensive” refit plan to be submitted to regulators aimed at ensuring its diesel models complied with emissions standards.

It will ask customers “in the next few days” to have diesel models equipped with manipulated software refitted and brief authorities on technical fixes in October, Matthias Mueller told a closed-door gathering of about 1000 top managers at Volkswagen's Wolfsburg headquarters late on Monday.

It has yet to be specified exactly what kind of work will take place on the cars and what effect it might have on the performance and efficiency of these vehicles. Would owners even bring their cars in if these aspects were compromised?

Volkswagen has said previously about 11 million vehicles were fitted with software capable of cheating emissions tests, including 5 million at its namesake brand, 2.1 million at luxury brand Audi, 1.2 million at Czech division Skoda and 1.8 million light commercial vehicles.

“We are facing a long trudge and a lot of hard work,” Mueller, appointed CEO of Europe's biggest automaker last Friday, said in the speech text seen by Reuters. “We will only be able to make progress in steps and there will be setbacks.”

Separately, Mueller said Volkswagen's troubled core VW division, struggling with high fixed costs and low profit margins, would in future be able to act as independently as premium flagship brands Audi and Porsche.

“The new company structure is a first step and the basis for a modernization of VW, for a new and better company,” he said.

Reuters

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