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  • WOLFSBURG, GERMANY - OCTOBER 26: The Volkswagen logo is reflected in the window and body of a Volkswagen ID.3 electric car standingt on display at the Autostadt promotional facility next to the Volkswagen factory on October 26, 2020 in Wolfsburg, Germany. The ID.3 and somewhat bigger ID.4 are Volkswagen's first real effort to break into the growing electric car market and are aimed for mass appeal.   (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

    EU fines BMW and VW $1 billion for limiting emissions reduction tech

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.08.2021

    The EU has fined BMW and VW a total of $1 billion for allegedly refusing to compete on diesel emissions-reducing technology and limiting its use.

  • olando_o via Getty Images

    EU believes BMW, Daimler and VW colluded over clean emissions tech

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    04.05.2019

    The European Commission believes BMW, Daimler and Volkswagen worked together to delay clean emissions technology. Last fall, the EU Commission launched a formal investigation to determine if the automakers breached EU antitrust rules by restricting competition on the development of emissions-reducing technology. Now, in a Statement of Objections, the Commission has informed BMW, Daimler and VW of its "preliminary view" that they did in fact violate antitrust rules -- meaning they also led to higher emissions and denied consumers the opportunity to buy less polluting cars.

  • Dimas Ardian/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    BMW denies conspiring with rivals on diesel emissions systems

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.23.2017

    VW isn't the only German automaker reeling from the effects of diesel emissions scandals. BMW is denying Der Spiegel allegations that it not only colluded with Daimler and the Volkswagen Auto Group (including Audi and Porsche) on the designs and prices for AdBlue diesel emissions treatment systems, but fell short of European exhaust standards. While the newspaper claims that BMW's thousand-plus meetings with rivals amounted to a "cartel," BMW insists that the meetings were simply meant to create a Europe-wide infrastructure for AdBlue. It also claims that the technology (which injects urea into the mix to help reduce emissions) meets the latest European requirements, and that it can update the software on older cars to meet that standard.