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Daimler strikes $2.2-billion diesel settlements in US

Agence France-Presse

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Daimler strikes $2.2-billion diesel settlements in US

The headquarters of German car producer Daimler AG is pictured in Stuttgart, Germany, on February 11, 2020. - Mercedes-Benz parent company Daimler reported plunging profits for 2019, after setting aside billions of euros to deal with potential fallout from the industry-wide "dieselgate" emissions cheating scandal. (Photo by THOMAS KIENZLE / AFP)

AFP

German carmaker Daimler says it has 'reached an agreement in principle with various US authorities to settle civil and environmental claims' involving around 250,000 diesel vehicles

Daimler has approved settlements worth $2.2 billion over emissions cheating software in its diesel vehicles in the United States, the German carmaker said on Thursday, August 13.

The company has “reached an agreement in principle with various US authorities to settle civil and environmental claims regarding emission control systems of approximately 250,000 diesel passenger cars and vans in the United States,” it said in a statement.

The agreement includes $1.5 billion to be paid to US authorities, plus $700 million to settle a consumer class action lawsuit.

The management and supervisory boards have approved the proposed settlements, which now need to be given the go-ahead by the relevant authorities and courts, the company said.

The US authorities involved are the Department of Justice, Customs and Border Protection, and authorities in California, where the first complaints were filed.

Daimler stands accused of hiding the fact that it was using illegal software in diesel cars to cheat emissions tests.

Cars involved in the so-called “dieselgate” scandal, which began with Volkswagen in 2015, had engines fitted with software that made them emit fewer harmful pollutants in the lab when they were undergoing tests than on the road.

The scandal has cost VW, the world’s biggest automaker with a dozen brands, more than 30 billion euros ($34 billion), for the most part in the United States.

Total charges of 5.5 billion euros from dieselgate and a mass recall of vehicles fitted with faulty airbags from supplier Takata contributed to Daimler’s net earnings slumping by 64% to 2.7 billion euros ($2.9 billion) last year.

Daimler said the settlements would have an impact on its cash flow for 3 years, including the next 12 months, but said it had made sufficient provisions to meet the costs. – Rappler.com

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