Volkswagen Diesel Fix Approved by US Regulators

Volkswagen Diesel Fix Approved by US Regulators

The EPA has approved Volkswagen diesel fix that will apply to 326,000 vehicles.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and California Air Resource Board (CARB) have approved a fix that will include hardware and software upgrades. One of the major changes is replacing an emissions catalyst, and vehicles will lose fuel economy by as much as 2 mpg.

The fix will apply to 98 percent of the 2.0-liter diesel engines in the U.S., and regulators added by saying extensive testing of the fix shows it will not affect “vehicle reliability or durability.”

SEE ALSO: Demand for VW TDI Vehicles Strong Despite Diesel Scandal

The vehicles covered by the fix include the 2009-2014 Jetta TDI, 2009-2014 Jetta SportWagen TDI, 2010-2014 Golf TDI, 2012-2014 Beetle and Beetle Convertible TDI, and 2010-2013 Audi A3 TDI.

In total, the German automaker has already spent $6.3-billion to repurchase cheating diesel vehicles with the 2.0-liter TDI engine.  reports the fix helps bring Volkswagen one step closer to being able to resell or export those vehicles currently being stored across the U.S.

[Source: Reuters]

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