German auto giant Volkswagen will formally start recalling 198,500 cars in the country next month to fix the emission software.
Models with 1.2-litre, 1.5-litre, 1.6-litre, and 2.0-litre EA 189 diesel engines that were manufactured and sold between 2008 and November 2015 will be part of the recall process.
“Starting from the second half of 2016, Volkswagen will recall 1.9 lakh cars and continue till ten months,” Volkswagen India head of marketing Kamal Basu told PTI in Kolkata on Saturday.
More From This Section
A formal start of the recall process got delayed as requisite approvals had to be sought from the carmaker’s headquarters in Germany and Indian authorities as well.
According to Volkswagen, the 2.0-litre diesel engine will only need a software upgrade, while the 1.6-litre EA 189 diesel engine will be subject to a hardware and software fix.
Starting July, communication would be sent to customers regarding this and to make them understand that the recall was purely voluntary in nature, Basu added.
The company denied using a defeat device in its cars sold in India unlike in the US and Europe where 11 million diesel-powered cars are believed to use an emission cheating device.
However, Union Heavy Industries Minister Anant Geete said in February that Volkswagen admitted that it used a device in its Indian cars that allowed it to report two types of emissions, violatindustry norms.
India’s premier research and testing agency Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) had conducted random checks on Volkswagen cars claimed emissions were nine times higher than permitted. The minister’s comment came after an investigation report was submitted to the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways by ARAI.
In April, Volkswagen suspended sales of 1.5 litre manual diesel variant of the of the Vento sedan over inconsistent emission and decided to recall 3,877 units of the car in India. Skoda followed suit and stopped sales of Rapid sedan on similar concerns.
Jurgen Stackmann, board member for sales and marketing, Volkswagen Passenger Cars, had apologised for wrongdoings in India during his visit in February.
"Volkswagen made some big mistakes and I am truly sorry and apologise to our customers, the authorities of this country and our dealers," Stackmann said before the unveiling of the compact sedan Ameo. Geete, however had said action should be taken against the company.
THE RECALL STORY
-
The German auto major had admitted use of defeat device in 11 million diesel engine cars sold in the US, Europe and other global markets
-
Earlier, Volkswagen recalled vehicles in the US to fix the emission software. The company has decided to carry out the exercise in India also
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)