U.S. judge clears VW settlement

Most of $15B deal earmarked for buybacks, repairs

A worker conducts a quality-control check on an Audi S3 on Monday at a plant in Gyor, Hungary. A U.S. judge gave preliminary approval Tuesday to a plan to compensate consumers whose Volkswagen and Audi vehicles have engines designed to cheat emissions tests.
A worker conducts a quality-control check on an Audi S3 on Monday at a plant in Gyor, Hungary. A U.S. judge gave preliminary approval Tuesday to a plan to compensate consumers whose Volkswagen and Audi vehicles have engines designed to cheat emissions tests.

SAN FRANCISCO -- A $15 billion settlement over Volkswagen's emissions cheating scandal cleared a hurdle Tuesday, with a federal judge giving preliminary approval to a deal that includes an option for owners to have the carmaker buy back their vehicles.

Attorneys for Volkswagen owners sought approval from U.S. District Court Judge Charles Breyer, who is overseeing consumer lawsuits and government allegations that the company's diesel engines cheated on U.S. emissions tests.

The terms call for the German carmaker to spend up to $10 billion buying back or repairing about 475,000 Volkswagens and Audi vehicles with 2-liter diesel engines and paying their owners an additional $5,100 to $10,000 each. Details about the vehicle repairs have not been finalized.

The judge's decision allows attorneys to notify vehicle owners of the terms, including using a settlement website to determine how much compensation they would get. The owners could object and opt out, allowing them to pursue legal action against Volkswagen on their own.

"It's not a simple settlement. I've never seen so many pages," Breyer said at the hearing. "It is extremely important that consumers and lawyers representing consumers understand and are privy to and are fully informed to all the details that are in this action before making a decision."

Breyer, who is expected to make a final decision in October, has kept close tabs on the negotiations and praised the efforts of attorneys and a court-appointed settlement master who helped broker the deal.

"I don't know that I need to make any grand observations about the settlement," he said. "It appears in your presentation today, as it appeared when you filed your documents, that an enormous effort has been devoted to achieving a series of goals."

The settlement also includes $2.7 billion for unspecified environmental mitigation and an additional $2 billion to promote zero-emissions vehicles. It does not cover about 85,000 more powerful Volkswagens and Audis with 3-liter engines also caught up in the emissions scandal.

A Justice Department lawyer told the judge Tuesday that VW is expected in August to submit a new proposal for fixing the 3-liter engines.

Volkswagen has acknowledged that their cars with diesel engines were programmed to turn on emissions controls during government lab tests and turn them off while on the road. Investigators found that the cars emitted more than 40 times the legal limit of nitrogen oxide, which can cause respiratory problems.

The company still faces billions more dollars in fines and penalties and possible criminal charges.

Volkswagen shares have fallen 23 percent since the emissions-cheating was disclosed on Sept. 18. Car owners who choose the buyback option will be compensated based on the value of their vehicles before the scandal became public.

Information for this article was contributed by Sudhin Thanawala of The Associated Press and by Kartikay Mehrotra and Margaret Cronin Fisk of Bloomberg News.

Business on 07/27/2016

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