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EPA Expands VW Emissions Probe to Other Carmakers

Sept. 21, 2015
The expanded investigation comes after Volkswagen admitted it equipped 482,000 cars in the United States with the illegal defeat devices.

WASHINGTON—The Environmental Protection Agency has expanded its investigation of pollution-skirting devices in diesel vehicles to other manufacturers after Volkswagen admitted it used them to thwart U.S. environmental standards.

The EPA  said Monday that it will screen for so-called "defeat devices" in diesel vehicles on the road that are produced by other manufacturers. The California Air Resources Board is a partner in the investigation, an EPA spokesperson said.

The EPA declined to identify the automakers it is looking at.

The expanded investigation came in the wake of Friday's announcement by the EPA and the California authorities that Volkswagen, Europe's biggest automaker, had admitted it equipped 482,000 cars in the United States with the illegal defeat devices.

The covert software device turns off emissions controls when the car is being driven and turns them on only when the car is undergoing an emissions test.

The vehicles affected are four-cylinder VW and Audi diesel cars built since 2008.

Under the U.S. Clean Air Act, fines of up to $37,500 may be imposed on each car, meaning VW could be fined more than $18 billion. 

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2015

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