Most of the time, media test cars are distinguished only by a license plate that might bear a discreet “manufacturer” tag. Audi diesels, though, are a different matter. Whether a Q7 or an A3, the diesel press cars from Audi (which is part of the Volkswagen Group) always bear towering “TDI Clean Diesel” decals across their flanks. I guess the theory is that when the cars are out on the road they’re serving double duty as billboards, spreading the gospel about the VW Group’s engineering prowess.
A few years ago I bought a nasty Ford F-350 diesel for an engine swap, and I parked it next to an Audi A3 and took a few shots to capture the juxtaposition: truck from the dirty diesel past, Audi harkening to the clean-burning future. That certainly looks ironic today.
If you’re not up to speed on Volkswagen’s shenanigans, you can catch up here and here. Suffice to say that it seems the A3’s sanctimonious TDI Clean Diesel stickers were relevant only when the cars were actually undergoing an EPA emissions test. Out in the real world, 2.0-liter Volkswagens and Audis were as much as 40 times above the legal emissions limit for nitrogen oxides (NOx). According to the EPA, about 482,000 U.S.-market diesel four-cylinder Volkswagens and Audis built since 2009 included what the agency defines as a “defeat device,” which is really just software that detects an emissions test and “turns full emissions controls on only during the test.” The cheater software was discovered by researchers at West Virginia University who were trying to document the cleanliness of modern diesels. Volkswagen surely wishes they hadn’t bothered.
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There’s no cheap fix nor easy settlement here.
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The revelation of this emissions subterfuge answers at least two questions about VW’s mighty little diesel. The first concerns urea injection, which every other modern diesel uses to pass emissions tests. (The 2015 TDI models have a new engine and urea-injection systems but for some reason still contained the devious code, according to the EPA’s statement.) The urea-injection systems help to neutralize NOx emissions, but they also add weight and cost to the car, and saddle car buyers with yet another tank of liquid that must be monitored. If you run out of this diesel exhaust fluid, it’s like running out of fuel—on trucks with such systems, running dry on urea triggers a severe limp-home mode with a 5 mph speed limiter. That’s how seriously the EPA takes NOx.
Everyone wondered how VW met emissions standards while foregoing urea injection for the cited 2009–2014 models. As it turns out, they didn’t. It wasn’t magical German engineering. Just plain old fraud.
The second question concerned fuel economy. It’s been widely noted that four-cylinder TDIs tend to smash their EPA fuel economy estimates in real-world driving. The last TDI Jetta SportWagen I drove was rated at 42 mpg highway, but on 60-mph two-lane roads I averaged more like 50 mpg. That’s a huge difference. Did running noncompliant emissions improve fuel economy? That’s possible. And if so, that raises an interesting question: When the cheater VWs emitted too much NOx, were they also emitting a lot less CO2 thanks to improved economy? Maybe the good doesn’t offset the bad, but it’s something to consider. You can bet that VW’s lawyers will.
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The intentionality behind the deceit makes this situation different from even a huge-scale recall.
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So, how is Volkswagen going to fix this? Putting aside the inevitable fines, possible criminal charges, and massive public disgrace, there are half a million cars running an emissions setup that never should’ve left the factory. And there’s no quick fix to make up for VW’s lies.
All the other carmakers control diesel emissions by spraying a urea solution into the exhaust stream, where a catalyst converts it to ammonia. The ammonia breaks down NOx into nitrogen and water. If all of that sounds like it would be tough to bolt right in, you’re correct. Maybe VW can meet the standards without adding equipment—say, by tweaking the engine control unit (ECU) with a different tuning. But what if that new tuning meets the emissions standards but sacrifices performance or fuel economy? Now you’ve got 482,000 customers on a class-action lawsuit.
There’s no easy way out of this, but VW had better figure something out, and pronto. Right now dealers are banned from selling 2.0-liter TDIs, which make up about a quarter of VW’s U.S. sales. News of the scandal caused VW Group to lose about a quarter of its market value on the European stock market, indicating that investors understand how bad this is. There’s no cheap fix nor easy settlement here.
The intentionality behind the deceit makes this situation different from even a huge-scale recall. This isn’t a story about a part that was made one cent cheaper than it should’ve been, where a car company cut a corner to save a little cash. It’s about an individual or a few within a huge corporation eying the rulebook and deciding there’s a competitive advantage in violating the Clean Air Act. Incompetence is one thing, but calculated mendacity is quite another.
It’s too bad. That Golf SportWagen TDI is a punchy, fun car. It offers great fuel economy, tons of torque, and a bargain price. But when something seems a little too good to be true, maybe that’s because it is.
Ezra Dyer is a monthly columnist and Carolinas Editor for Car and Driver, and the Automotive Editor for Popular Mechanics. This story originally appeared on popularmechanics.com.
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