Volkswagen India will recall 3,877 units of Vento equipped with 1.5-litre diesel engine and manual gearbox but in case of Skoda there is no recall involved.
Emissions of the particular version of Vento were observed to be sometimes exceeding the threshold limits during the Conformity of Production tests done by the ARAI.
"At the same time, Volkswagen India is temporarily holding back sales of the manual gearbox version of the Volkswagen Vento with 1.5-litre diesel engine with immediate effect," Volkswagen India said in a statement
Once approved and confirmed by the competent authorities, Volkswagen India will implement the measures and resume the production and sales of the vehicle, it added.
More From This Section
"The same technical measures will also be implemented in the impacted vehicles that are already with customers," it said.
Volkswagen India said the problem impacts only the manual gearbox version of Vento with 1.5-litre diesel engine and is not connected to the global NOx emissions topic.
"All other diesel models and variants of Volkswagen India, including Vento 1.5 TDI with automatic transmission (DSG) and all diesel Polo cars, conform to the norms and will continue to be produced and sold in India," it said.
The company further said it will continue to sell Rapid models which are powered by 1.6 MPI petrol engine and the 1.5 TDI diesel engine with the Automatic Transmission.
Earlier this year, the company had apologised over emission scandal in India but insisted its cars followed the country's norms.
This is, however, contradicted by the government with Heavy Industries Minister Anant Geete claiming that "on-road tests have revealed emission in excess of nine times" in VW cars in India although they passed ARAI tests at factories.
The recall covered cars sold from 2008 till end of November 2015 in India. It encompasses cars from the Volkswagen, Audi and Skoda model range which carry the software that requires to be updated.
VW had admitted use of defeat device in 11 million diesel engine cars sold in the US, Europe and other global markets that allowed manipulation of emissions tests by changing the performance of the vehicles to improve results.