BMW, Daimler, Volkswagen colluded to limit emissions says EU

Companies broke EU laws from 2006 to 2014 by illegally agreeing among themselves to limit the roll-out of technology to clean emissions

epa07486365 (FILE) - A VW (Volkswagen) logo on a car seen in front of the Higher Regional Court (OLG) in Stuttgart, Germany, 05 February 2019 (reissued 05 April 2019). Media reports on 05 April 2019 state the EU commission regulators in a statement have charged German carmakers Daimler, Volkswagen and BMW of collusion in the area of emissions cleaning technology by 'participating in a collusive scheme, in breach of EU competition rules, to limit the development and roll-out of emission-cleaning technology for new diesel and petrol passenger cars sold in the European Economic Area'.  EPA/RONALD WITTEK
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European Union authorities said Friday that German automakers BMW, Daimler and Volkswagen colluded to limit the development of emissions-cleaning technology in cars.

The EU antitrust regulator said that after an in-depth investigation, it found the companies broke EU laws from 2006 to 2014 by illegally agreeing among themselves to limit the roll-out of the technology, which helps clean the exhaust emissions from both gasoline and diesel passenger cars.

The alleged actions would have limited Europeans' options for less polluting cars, but not their price. The probe is separate from other legal procedures against carmakers for allegedly breaching environmental laws.

Emissions have become a big topic for carmakers as authorities try to meet climate change goals and after Volkswagen admitted in 2015 that it cheated on car emissions tests.

EU authorities raided the offices of the three companies in October 2017 and opened their investigation in September last year. At the time, Daimler, Volkswagen and BMW all said they were cooperating with the EU Commission.

The EU noted that its preliminary findings do not prejudge the final outcome of the investigation.