
Wrong. Four years after VW confessed to systematically evading pollution rules for a decade, new documents show that VW’s Audi luxury-car unit was more deeply involved in developing the emissions cheating scheme than previously known, and continued to sell vehicles with illegal software even after the scandal became public. The documents show that Audi managers and engineers were just as willing as their VW counterparts to cheat in pursuit of the company’s goal of becoming the largest carmaker in the world.
Audi execs bluntly discussed what was in effect a criminal conspiracy, using terms like “defeat device” or “cycle beating” that clearly connote illegal attempts to defeat the testing procedures used by regulators. “We won’t make it without a few dirty tricks,” wrote an employee. Trapped between corporate aspirations and the laws of physics, Audi engineers devised an ingenious but illegal workaround. They installed software in the engine that could recognize the telltale signs of an official emissions test. If regulators were looking, the software would temporarily ramp up pollution controls to be compliant. In everyday use, the cars produced emissions far above legal limits, resulting in estimates of 1,000s of pollution-influenced deaths.
A 2008 Audi Powerpoint presentation noted that the approach was a form of cycle beating, the automotive equivalent of cheating on an exam. “Highly critical in the USA!” the document warned.
As VW later admitted in a plea agreement, Audi deployed illegal software anyway. So ingrained was the use of illegal software that Audi continued to use it even after the U.S. formally accused it of emissions cheating in 2015.
Classroom discussion questions:
- Why is this a sustainability issue?
- What exactly did VW do that was wrong?
One would have thought Toyota’s experience in putting ‘largest’ above the customer would have been a cautionary tale. Guess not. Just one more example of aberrant behaviours being driven by the wrong measures.