Not Just Consumer Fraud, VW Scandal Called 'Crime Against Climate'
Joining the chorus of watchdogs who say Volkswagen (VW) must pay for its corporate crime, the Center for Biological Diversity (CBD) on Tuesday released an analysis charging that financial penalties for the company’s environmental violations should be no less than $25.1 billion in the United States alone.
While VW Chief Executive Matthias Müller stressed on Wednesday that “there were no deaths, and our cars were, and are safe,” the evidence suggests otherwise.
CBD points out that VW’s vast cheating scandal on smog testing emitted powerful greenhouse gases equivalent to adding at least 32.2 million tons of extra carbon pollution into the atmosphere, or the emissions of 6.8 million cars.
“Make no mistake: What happened here is a national and international disaster, and history will mention it in the same breath as Exxon Valdez and the BP oil spill.”
—Peter Galvin, Center for Biological Diversity
And that number could be even higher. Also Tuesday, CBD filed a Freedom of Information Act request (pdf) to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) seeking a full accounting of the actual amount of pollution released as a result of the emissions-fixing debacle—information that’s likely to drive up the total estimated penalties.
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