(ANSA) - Washington, May 23 - The US Justice Department on
Tuesday filed a civil suit against Fiat Chrysler Automobiles
after US authorities accused the Italo-American carmaker of
using software allowing higher-than-standard emissions in
104,000 diesel cars, Bloomberg reported.
FCA said in a statement it was "annoyed at the justice
department decision and intended to defend itself "strongly", in
particular against the possible charge of deliberately
installing cheat devices.
In mid-January the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
notified FCA that it had broken the Clean Air Act over
diesel emissions from around 140,000 vehicles, the EPA
announced, stressing that FCA may face civil sanctions and
prompting FCA chief Sergio Marchionne to say that no one would
be so "stupid" as to have fitted such software.
The vehicles mounted with software that allegedly allowed
above-limit diesel emissions are Grand Cherokee and Dodge Ram,
the EPA said. FCA shares dived 15% on the news and were
suspended from trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles "dodged the rules" on diesel
emissions and "has been found out", the EPA said.
By not communicating the existence of software affecting
emissions, FCA was guilty, it said, of "a serious violation of
the law."
The EPA said "all carmakers must play by the same rules" and
said "once again, a carmaker has taken a decision to get around
the rules".
EPA and California authorities "worked to to boost tests
after the Volkswagen case, and this is the result of their
collaboration".
FCA US said it had respected the rules and was ready to work
with authorities on the case.
FCA US said it believed "its emissions control systems
respect the applicable norms" and it was ready to collaborate
with the new administration "to present its arguments and
resolve the question in a correct and fair way, reassuring the
EPA and FCA US customers on the fact that the company's diesel
vehicles respect all the applicable norms".
FCA US said it "strongly hoped to be able to meet the EPA's
enforcement division as soon as possible and representatives of
the new administration, to show that FCA's (emissions) control
strategies are justified and therefore do not constitute defeat
devices according to the applicable rules, and to promptly
resolve the question."
There is nothing in common between the Volkswagen emissions
case and that of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, Marchionne told a
press conference.
"We have been talking to EPA for more than a year,"
Marchionne said.
Marchionne said it was odd and "unpleasant" that the EPA had
decided to address the alleged case of emissions violations so
publicly.
He said FCA had been notified Wednesday by authorities that
something was in the offing, and had found out Thursday morning
at 8 a.m. that the EPA was accusing it of breaking diesel
emissions norms.
Marchionne said that "as far as I know this company, I can
say that no one is so stupid" as to try to fit illegal software
to dodge emissions limits.
Marchionne went on to say that FCA will survive even if it is
fined $4.6 billion as some sources reported.
Stressing that the US Justice Department and the
Environmental Protection Agency probably worked together on the
case, Marchionne said he was very angry, according to Bloomberg
News.
FCA US could face a sanction of up to $4.63 billion for
allegedly breaking the US emissions rules, CNBC reported.
US files suit for FCA diesel emissions (4)
FCA says will defend itself