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Peugeot will prove it doesn't offer cheater diesels

Thu, Oct 29 2015
Our diesels are clean, really. That's the message from French automaker PSA/Peugeot-Citroen as it plans to go on the offensive in response to Volkswagen's diesel-emissions scandal. PSA will go out of its way to prove its diesels are as clean as advertised. The company is looking at disclosing "real-world" fuel-economy statistics as soon as next spring and will use an independent entity to vet the numbers, Automotive News Europe says, citing comments that PSA/Peugeot-Citroen financial chief Jean-Baptiste de Chatillon made to reporters this week.

Such efforts may be vital, since roughly two-thirds of the vehicles Peugeot-Citroen sells in Europe are powered by a diesel engine. Last month, VW admitted that as many as 11 million of its diesel-powered vehicles were programmed with software designed to cheat emissions-testing systems. The news shook up the industry, especially companies that sell a good chunk of diesels.

The EU itself may start instituting "real world" fuel-economy and emissions testing as soon as 2017. French regulators have said they may eliminate diesel-fuel subsidies that currently make diesel fuel cheaper to customers than gas. That adjustment may occur as soon as next year, since it's been pushed up in response to the VW scandal.

Peugeot-Citron continues to reiterate that it has never installed software that was designed to cheat emissions-testing systems. Additionally, the automaker was more than a decade ahead of European Union mandates for engine components designed to cut soot emissions, so the company is hoping its track record makes a difference. It wants to be perfectly clear about that.
  • News Source: Automotive News Europe-sub.req.
  • Image Credit: Cletus Awreetus/Flickr
  • Green
  • Volkswagen
  • Citroen
  • Peugeot
  • Diesel Vehicles
  • vw diesel scandal
  • France
  • psa peugeot citroen

By Danny King


See also: Vahland leaving VW over dispute on how to run NA region, FCA to pay buyers $1,700 to swap out of scandal-mired VWs, Jaguar Land Rover remains bullish on diesels.