The company recently acknowledged ‘irregularities’ with its reported CO2 output levels for some models, including gasoline- and diesel-powered vehicles. Mostly affecting Euro-spec cars, the misreported CO2 numbers consequently allowed fuel-efficiency ratings to be inflated.
The additional issues were claimed to be discovered “under the ongoing review of all processes and workflows” connected to the diesel-emissions scandal, however a unnamed sources have told German newspaper Bild am Sonntag that executives already knew of problems in 2014.
In one case, the Polo TDI BlueMotion was burning diesel at rates 18 percent higher than VW’s promised mpg figures. Then-CEO Martin Winterkorn allegedly responded by pulling the car from the market this spring, rather than publicly acknowledging the discrepancy.
If true, the report potentially hints at more legal trouble for the disgraced automaker. Prosecutors are still investigating criminal wrongdoing, either against the company as a whole or individual workers and executives.
“The offering of the Blue Motion TDI Polo was suspended in all markets due to subdued demand,” the company said in a statement published by Reuters. “We are currently testing all models built from 2012 for differences in CO2 levels from the listed values.”
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