"We estimate that an average six-digit number will be affected by this recall," said Daimler, using a formula that is common in Germany. The group specifies that it will appeal the decision while "cooperating with the authorities". At least 260,000 "Sprinter" type vans are involved in this European recall, the company said in a statement, stating that all vehicles were built before June 2016.
The KBA had opened an investigation in early October, according to German media, suspecting the manufacturer of the installation of "illegal software" to make appear less polluting cars in the laboratory than actually on the roads.
Daimler has already recalled 700'000 cars, including nearly 300'000 in Germany, but disputes the illegality of the "engine management functions" pinned by the authorities. The builder performs recalls, which aim to install software fixes in vehicles.
"Dieselgate"
Investigations into the diesel scandal began in Germany in 2015 when Volkswagen admitted to rigging 11 million vehicles, including 2.4 million sold in Germany. At the end of September, Daimler had agreed to pay a fine of 870 million euros for putting on the market since 2008 diesel vehicles that did not meet the legal standards on pollutant emissions.
Read also : Fake engines: Daimler, the manufacturer of Mercedes, allegedly manipulated the engine of a million vehicles
But the group insisted that this did not change its appreciation of the legality of the software used. Friday, Daimler clarified that the recall was going to have "no negative effect on the result," but said that other reminders "can not be excluded" because "the proceedings with the KBA are in progress."
The maker of Mercedes-Benz posted in July a quarterly loss of 1.2 billion euros, caused by provisions under the "dieselgate", the first quarterly loss for the group in ten years. In addition, four Daimler officials are still being investigated, accused of fraud and misleading advertising related to the handling of diesel emissions.
Source link
https://www.lenouvelliste.ch/articles/economie/daimler-doit-rappeler-des-centaines-de-milliers-de-mercedes-873131