By Jan Schwartz, Georgina Prodhan and David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Volkswagen Chief Executive Officer Matthias Mueller met with the top U.S. environmental official for about an hour on Wednesday, just a day after U.S. regulators rejected a plan to fix hundreds of thousands of diesel cars with excess emissions as inadequate and not fast enough.
Mueller met with EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy along with Herbert Diess, head of the company's VW brand, and left around 11 a.m. EST (1600 GMT) from the agency's headquarters without making any comments.
"We appreciate the time that Administrator McCarthy took to meet with us," the company said in a statement. "Volkswagen will continue to fully cooperate."
The German automaker declined to answer questions about the meeting, which Volkswagen had requested .
"We appreciated the conversation with Volkswagen," McCarthy said, "We will continue to work toward a solution."
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In Detroit, Chris Grundler, who heads the agency's Office of Transportation and Air Quality, said at a Automotive News forum that the agency wanted a fix as soon as possible.
"We are in a hurry," he said but offered no timetable for approving a fix or offering details on why VW's initial proposal fell short.
On his first U.S. visit since the emissions scandal erupted in September, Mueller has been meeting with government officials in Washington since late Monday.
(Additional reporting by Anika Ross and Andreas Cremer; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)