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Transportation EU The Courts

VW Group, BMW and Daimler Are Under Investigation For Collusion In Europe (cnet.com) 151

The European Commission has launched an antitrust investigation into the Volkswagen Group, BMW and Daimler, over allegations they colluded to keep certain emissions control devices from reaching the market in Europe, according to a statement the Commission released on Tuesday. CNET reports: The technologies the group allegedly sought to bury include a selective catalytic reduction system for diesel vehicles, which would help to reduce environmentally problematic oxides of nitrogen in passenger cars, and "Otto" particulate filters that trap particulate matter from gasoline combustion engines.

"The Commission is investigating whether BMW, Daimler and VW agreed not to compete against each other on the development and roll-out of important systems to reduce harmful emissions from petrol and diesel passenger cars," said Commissioner Margrethe Vestager, head of competition policy for the European Commission, in a statement. "These technologies aim at making passenger cars less damaging to the environment. If proven, this collusion may have denied consumers the opportunity to buy less polluting cars, despite the technology being available to the manufacturers."

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VW Group, BMW and Daimler Are Under Investigation For Collusion In Europe

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  • Bloody Europe (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @05:14AM (#57340648)

    It's shocking how Europe is always so biased against these American companies and never investigates any of it's own.

    Oh wait.

  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @05:34AM (#57340696) Homepage

    ... sometimes with good reason, but we need people like him to force innovation on these dinosaurs otherwise nothing will change even if at the end of the day the maverick loses and the dinosaurs survive but producing much better vehicles.

    • yeap (and we can see he's very tired in the last interviews: maybe it's related to it and "all work and no play makes jack a dull boy" :P)
    • He isn't innovating anything. He is producing a car that only the 1% can afford. There are other manufacturers producing affordable EVs today, not Tesla.
      • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @08:24AM (#57341256) Journal
        In August more Model 3 were sold than Altima, Accent, Legacy, Impreza, Sentra, Focus, the Fiats, Chryslers, ....all these "affordable" middle class cars. Of course it also outsold all BMW cars combined, all Lexus cars combined, all MB cars combined, so it is definitely breaking out of the luxury, high end markets and reaching outside.

        Only Accord, Civic, Corolla and Camry outsold Model 3 in August. It is not a 1% 's car. More like 2%'s car. Very few outside the 5% buy brand new cars. 95% of Americans buy used vehicles. 90% of the Americans are driving used vehicles they bought below 20K.

        Model S and X can be legitimately called 1%'s car. But Model 3 is affordable for about 30% of the people who buy new cars. https://cleantechnica.com/2018... [cleantechnica.com]

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The Model 3 isn't a cheap car though, so it's likely that these figures are just because they did a pre-order and people had time to save up. Either that or there are a lot of rich people who can afford to drop $50k on a car.

          I have a feeling that the base $35k model may be dropped, at least in Europe. They already removed it from their web site.

          While I'm glad it's selling well, credit for popularizing EVs must also go to Nissan. The Leaf, especially outside the US, was the game changer. Affordable, good, an

          • I have talked to Leaf owners. It is actually not a good intro to EV.

            The battery had no thermal management. So it was losing capacity very quickly. Lost 50% capacity in two years due to battery degradation. Nissan attempted to fix it by reducing the charging current rate. So it needed more than 12 hours of charge. Winter range drops to 75 miles on full charge. In two or three year old vehicles is around 40 miles on full charge, and you need to wrap yourself in blankets and avoid using the cabin heat.

            Bol

          • No the 35K model will come, once the waiting list is exhausted and the battery production capacity hits 10,000 a week. The German breakdown predicted a $20K gross margin per vehicle for the premium version at 10K units/week. The Monroe breakdown predicted a $10K margin at the 4K units/week. UBS sued Monroe to gag him up, but its report did agree 42K as the production cost for the premium versions. It switched to net margin, including factory depreciation and R&D costs to report a negative margin for the
            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              The issue with he $35k model is that it's just not very competitive. For that you get a stripped down hatchback with a decent motor but very little else. No comfort features like heated/ventilated seats, minimal interior, no autopilot etc. And most of all the range isn't that impressive for the money.

              You can already buy a Kona, Niro is due in a couple of months, Leaf 60 is due this year too. The Model 3 Short Range out is already expensive compared to those cars and the spec you get from their top models, l

              • If they really make a good EV and occupy the 35K segment, it is ok. The goal is to kill the ICEV, not propping up Tesla.

                But without Tesla they wont make a no-compromise EV. They will design it not to hurt the ICEV sales. Without Tesla chasing their tail there will not be a really good EV at 35K. That is why we need to pop up Tesla till the market shifts. Then we can let Tesla go to hell.

                Look how crippled Leaf was. No thermal management system, 50% capacity loss in two years, reduced to 40 mile range in

          • The Model 3 isn't a cheap car though,

            Auto lending has increased, and the TCO of the Model 3 is lower than an ICE-based vehicle, so while it's not cheap... it's not actually expensive, either.

            While I'm glad it's selling well, credit for popularizing EVs must also go to Nissan.

            Not really. Nobody not already converted to EVs sees a Leaf and says "wow, I want to buy an EV". Teslas, on the other hand... The truth is that Tesla made the EV popular, and Nissan has benefited from that... and from Tesla's backlog. Lots of people bought a Leaf because they couldn't get their hands on a Tesla. That is the very definition of not being coo

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              I dunno, there is a lot of interest in the 40kWh model from non-EV people.

              The M3 TCO might be lower than some ICE cars, but still not really in the affordable category. And most importantly it's much, much more expensive than the competition for long range EVs, namely the Niro, Kona and soon the Leaf 60.

            • Right. A $60,000 Tesla is not expensive. You guys live in a bubble.
        • OK, a 2% car. What the F. Moron. The point is it isn't an affordable EV. There are other companies providing that.
          • Affordability isn't a static line on the graph. What's affordable to some isn't necessarily affordable to you. And that's perfectly ok, for the record.

            I don't know why you have broomstick up your ass about what other people do with their money.

        • Us auto sales in 207 were around 17 million. source. There's 222 million drivers in America. That's around 7% of drivers buying new cars.

          Somehow this doesn't seem sustainable. It's also probably why used car prices are so crazy. E.g. a low mileage used car is within 10% of the price of a new one. I paid $12.5k for a 2014 Sentra not long ago and only got it that cheap because it'd been in a fender bender....

          OTOH I wish I could come up with a way to snatch trade ins from dealers and put them in the hand
          • Carvana and Carmax are making a dent into that segment of the market.

            People buying used car, out of factory warranty, want to see, touch and drive the car, may be take it to a mechanic. The internet companies take cars not in demand in some part (like AWD Subaru in Florida) and sell them where they have high local demand.

            Used car market going national and transparent will put a dent into the high mark ups of high quality used cars.

        • by Cederic ( 9623 )

          In August more Model 3 were sold than Altima, Accent, Legacy, Impreza, Sentra, Focus, the Fiats, Chryslers, ....all these "affordable" middle class cars. Of course it also outsold all BMW cars combined, all Lexus cars combined, all MB cars combined,

          Meanwhile, in the real world, there were more BMWs alone sold in August than there were Tesla cars (of any model):
          http://carsalesbase.com/us-car... [carsalesbase.com]
          http://carsalesbase.com/us-car... [carsalesbase.com]

          Sure, not totally reliable data but substantially better than the ones you provided.

          Given BMW and Mercedes alone sell more cars each month than Tesla make in a quarter, I'm feeling confident that you're talking shit.

          • Given BMW and Mercedes alone sell more cars each month than Tesla make in a quarter, I'm feeling confident that you're talking shit.

            The figures you cite includes cross overs, SUVs and cars. Tesla has not released model Y yet. Once it does, we can compare these numbers. Anyway there is a legitimate argument that sedan market is shrinking anyway, and the BMW sedan sale drop (double digits for three years now) is not due to Tesla.

            • by Cederic ( 9623 )

              Once it does, we can compare these numbers.

              So why did you compare these numbers?

              Anyway there is a legitimate argument

              Which you didn't try to make.

              Seriously, there are plenty of good reasons to support Tesla. Idiots spouting bullshit to try and close down conversation merely obscure those.

              • Anyway there is a legitimate argument

                Which you didn't try to make.

                Seriously, there are plenty of good reasons to support Tesla. Idiots spouting bullshit to try and close down conversation merely obscure those.

                OK I did not give allowance in advance for a possible legitimate counter argument. Good. Point well taken.

                Did you vocalize any of the plenty of good reasons to support Tesla? 4 digit ID, achievements 39, lots of postings. I cant find if you had done so. Please post links if you have.

    • Well, really, the problem here is a lack of capitalism. Capitalism handles this quite well: somebody buys all the patents for these emissions technologies, positions themselves as having great emissions, causes the standards to tighten, and licenses the technology to their competitors so they make a fucking mint.

      When you don't have regulations--notably, anti-trust regulations--capitalism goes away. Instead of competing, they collude, and they don't bring these technologies forward.

      So you see, anti-tr

      • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @09:39AM (#57341738) Homepage Journal

        Well, really, the problem here is a lack of capitalism.

        Wrong. What you see here is an excess of capitalism. Capitalism means that capital controls the means of production, full stop. It obviously does not mean whatever you think it means.

        Capitalism handles this quite well:

        No, it doesn't. It requires some kind of regulatory body to make it handle this situation.

        somebody buys all the patents for these emissions technologies, positions themselves as having great emissions, causes the standards to tighten, and licenses the technology to their competitors so they make a fucking mint.

        The patents were developed by the automakers, and used to prevent that from happening. They did that because they stood to make more money by slowing it down, because those systems cost money and if they slow down progress, they don't have to put them on the vehicles they sell and they can keep more money — because consumers will only pay so much for a vehicle, which is based on their position in capitalism.

        So you see, anti-trust regulations are the great protector of capitalism: they prevent companies from acting against market forces and suppressing the great innovation power of competition.

        No, preventing competition is a perfectly normal thing to do under capitalism. Anti-trust regulations are the great protector of the free market, which paradoxically cannot exist without government interference.

        • Ah, but you miss the salient detail: without the anti-trust regulations, the capitalist market eventually turns into superconglomerates selling out for big money, until the final merger and acquisition cycle leaves you with one giant megacorporation which can unilaterally crush all competition by shutting off access by anyone to anything. That is your government: a single corporate dictator, owner of all.

          That's not capitalism anymore. Capitalism only survives, as you observe, by the maintenance of gov

          • Bunch of baloney that is. All capital intensive markets will gravitate towards a single monopolistic provider without government restraint. The automakers got around this by colluding with each other to deliberately break competition and break the very capital policies that make the markets work.

            You cannot have a functioning capital market without anti-trust controls. Any market with significant capital spending will devolve automatically towards a single monopoly provider in such a case without government

          • Not only is that capitalism, it's the ultimate end-goal of capitalism. No-one runs a business because they want to compete, they run a business because they want to crush everyone and enjoy a profitable monopoly.

      • Well, really, the problem here is a lack of capitalism. Capitalism handles this quite well: somebody buys all the patents for these emissions technologies, positions themselves as having great emissions, causes the standards to tighten, and licenses the technology to their competitors so they make a fucking mint.

        *Sigh* another person who doesn't understand the difference between the political concept of capitalism and the economic concept of the perfect market.

        • Oh, I don't think the economic perfect market can exist without political controls to keep it running. It'll turn itself into a monopolistic quasi-government unless you come in with a broomstick and break up the salt bridges now and then.

          • An economic perfect market exists in theory and is the perfectly unstable form of a market in a capitalist policitcal system. In the absence of any regulation this market will degrade to full monopoly which is the capitalist system's stable state.

  • No pee pee tapes.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    ... Except a token gesture. Germany's car industry is vital to German economy, and Europe's economy IS German economy. That's just the way it is. That's why Dieselgate was a powerful shock to the whole EU and a "friendly" reminder from president Obama that the US can turn off the EU at any given moment without Europeans being able to do anything about it. Junker is huffing and puffing and making a big show of challenging Trump's America because he knows that retaliatory measures against the EU would be oppo

    • by fintux ( 798480 )

      Europe's economy IS German economy.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP) - 2017 figures for GDP EU: 20.85 trillion USD, Germany: 4.15 trillion USD.

      https://www.thelocal.de/20150924/what-the-vw-scandal-means-for-germanys-economy - Germany's car industry sales are 14% of Germany's GDP.

      Certainly, car industry is very important for Germany. And also certainly, Germany's economy is very important for the EU. But to claim an equality between these is a hyperbole.

      That's why Dieselgate was a powerful shock to the whole EU and a "friendly" reminder from president Obama that the US can turn off the EU at any given moment without Europeans being able to do anything about it

      Also, a significant portion of the car sales does NOT go to the

    • If the EU tips over, the US is going down with it.

  • Only Tesla scandals, real and imagined, are to be given top play. Please take down this thread.
  • There's little doubt that automakers would sell their grandmothers into slavery if the price was right, I'm a bit curious why they would take the legal risk of conspiring to suppress development of a spectrum of emission control technologies. The cost of plugging away lethargically on emission control device development is low ("Hey we're working on better catalysts. But it's slow. Developing new technologies takes time"). The cost of getting caught is likely to be very high.

    • There's little doubt that automakers would sell their grandmothers into slavery if the price was right, I'm a bit curious why they would take the legal risk of conspiring to suppress development of a spectrum of emission control technologies.

      It couldn't be more obvious: they stood to make more money by not putting this equipment into vehicles than they stood to lose by getting fined later. So long as punishments don't fit crimes, you will only see more of this kind of behavior.

  • So it was VW and Daimler who hacked the US 2016 Election. It was the Germans, not the Russians, all along!
  • by reanjr ( 588767 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2018 @10:53AM (#57342260) Homepage

    Europe has much stricter environmental laws, but it turns out European manufacturers are shady as fuck. This is pretty much the perennial argument about private enterprise throwing up their hands once the government steps in.

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