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Musk, Others Want Volkswagen To Go Electric Instead of Fixing Diesels (washingtonpost.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Volkswagen has put itself in a tough spot. After cheating emissions standards, the company faces billions in fines and repair costs to bring those vehicles into spec and make peace with regulators. But a group of business owners, investors, and environmentalists has a different suggestion. The group, headlined by Elon Musk, sent an open letter to the California Air Resources Board outlining their solution. They want Volkswagen to be released from its obligation to fix cars already on the road, and instead require that the company substantially accelerate its rollout of zero-emission vehicles.

They want Volkswagen's money to go into manufacturing plants and R&D for zero-emission technology rather than to government-mandated fines. (Note that these investments would give Musk, in particular, another direct competitor.) The letter says, "In contrast to the punishments and recalls being considered, this proposal would be a real win for California emissions, a big win for California jobs, and a historic action to help derail climate change. The bottleneck to the greater availability of zero emissions vehicles is the availability of batteries. There is an urgent need to build more battery factories to increase battery supply, and this proposal would ensure that large battery plant and related investments, with their ensuing local jobs, would be made in the U.S. by VW."

2 of 313 comments (clear)

  1. "Soup is Good Food" campaign by Campbells. by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 5, Interesting
    VW electric vehicles would compete with Tesla electric vehicles, still Musk seems to be asking for more competition. It reminds me of the old "Soup is Good Food" campaign by Campbells. By promoting all soups, including their competitors, Campbell got the "good guy" image and it also benefitted because it had the largest share in the soup market.

    Greater acceptance and availability of electric vehicles and the growth of electric vehicle market segment would benefit Musk, and it also adds to hi good guy image. It is quite possible Musk appears to be a good guy is because he *is* actually a good guy.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  2. Re:VW have fundamental engineering issues by rahvin112 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Most German cars are frequently in the shop. The German manufacturers have cultivated this myth about their engineering but in reality the cars they make are actually on the very low end of the reliability ratings. I inherited a Golf, it was a fun car to drive, very nice interior, but the power steering went out at 50k miles and it was a $1200 repair. This along with a long line of mechanical problems.

    I won't ever buy a VW because of that experience. They are overpriced junk that even Chevy beats in reliability.