Two days after the September resignation of Volkswagen boss Martin Winterkorn over emissions manipulations, German rival Daimler issued a press release as unambiguous as one can be. "We categorically deny the accusation of manipulating emission tests regarding our vehicles." A device to cheat on emissions tests "has never been and will never be used at Daimler," the group said. Later, the $80 billion giant said Deutsche Umwelthilfe, an environmental group that kept suggesting otherwise, acted "in a dubious way as is usual with it," and threatened to sue for financial damages.
This emission snootiness has now ground to a halt. On the same day Volkswagen unveiled an agreement with US regulators over its dirty diesels, Daimler revealed that the US Department of Justice had put its own emissions in the crosshairs.
The group is now conducting an internal probe into its emission certification process. It said it would look at "possible indications of irregularities," without giving more details. Investors promptly knocked more than six per cent off Daimler's share price, wiping almost euro 5 billion off its market cap.
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It is also possible that any emissions infringements are technical, relating to disclosure oversights: all modern cars are equipped with software that controls and tweaks emission control systems in certain situations, for instance to protect the engine from damage during starting or in cold temperatures. These so called "auxiliary emission control devices" are legal, but only if they are fully disclosed and explained to authorities during the registration process. Otherwise, US law treats them as a deliberately misleading defeat device - which is how Audi tripped up in the US with regard to its 3-litre diesel engines.
All that said, VW presents a hair-raising glimpse of what could happen if the US authorities uncover something more nefarious. Daimler shareholders have good reason to feel edgy.