U.S. Engine Maker Will Pay $1.6 Billion to Settle Claims of Emissions Cheating
The company, Cummins, was accused of installing devices to defeat pollution controls on hundreds of thousands of trucks.
By Coral Davenport
Reporting from Washington
Dec. 22, 2023
The United States and the state of California have reached an agreement in principle with the truck engine manufacturer Cummins on a $1.6 billion penalty to settle claims that the company violated the Clean Air Act by installing devices to defeat emissions controls on hundreds of thousands of engines, the Justice Department announced on Friday.
The penalty would be the largest ever under the Clean Air Act and the second largest ever environmental penalty in the United States.
Defeat devices are parts or software that bypass, defeat or render inoperative emissions controls like pollution sensors and onboard computers. They allow vehicles to pass emissions inspections while still emitting high levels of smog-causing pollutants such as nitrogen oxide, which is linked to asthma and other respiratory illnesses.
The Justice Department has accused the company of installing defeat devices on 630,000 model year 2013 to 2019 RAM 2500 and 3500 pickup truck engines. The company is also alleged to have secretly installed auxiliary emission control devices on 330,000 model year 2019 to 2023 RAM 2500 and 3500 pickup truck engines.
Volkswagen scandal of 2015, when the automaker was found to have illegally installed the devices in millions of diesel passenger cars worldwide. Volkswagen agreed to pay up to $14.7 billion in a consumer class-action settlement. The company also agreed to buy back about 430,000 of the approximately 11 million millions cars that carried the cheating software.
In 2020, another E.P.A. investigation found that individual owners and operators of more than half a million diesel pickup trucks had been illegally disabling the emissions control technology on their vehicles.
"E.P.A. is on the job because of what was learned through the Volkswagen scandal, and their oversight has increased significantly," said Luke Tonachel, an expert on clean vehicle policy at the Natural Resources Defense Council, an advocacy group. "Our government needs to continue to be vigilant to ensure cheating doesn't continue."
MASSIVE EPA FINE LEVIED AGAINST CUMMINS
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Tarh331_Dad, Dec 28, 2023.
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Our government needs to continue to be vigilant to ensurecheating doesn't continue."
That quote almost made me spit my beer out.!Gearjammin' Penguin, m16ty, W923 and 15 others Thank this. -
Ya know, if so many ####ing people are so intent on bypassing, removeing or destroying these moronic controls world wide. A SENSABLE person would pause and ask WHY. The epas response is to double down on stupid and crazy.
These emissions controls are going to turn out to have been an enviromental catastrophe and more and more evidence is showing they make things worse already. Sadly though this is the government so sense will never enter the picture.Gearjammin' Penguin, W923, fordconvert and 11 others Thank this. -
rollin coal, Gearjammin' Penguin, jamespmack and 13 others Thank this. -
Cummins should tell them to go pound sand and relocate any and all service and manufacturing facilities out of commiefornia and over to a friendlier state.
Civil disobedience on a massive scare cannot come sooner. The emperor has no clothes.Gearjammin' Penguin, W923, fordconvert and 4 others Thank this. -
W923, fordconvert, JoeyJunk and 1 other person Thank this.
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Honestly couldn’t give me one of those engines anyway. 2019+ especially are no good. Up to 2018…okay if the parts fall off it. The old 5.9’s were better.
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fordconvert and JoeyJunk Thank this.
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At times the best way to progress forward, is to take a step backwards first……
W923, Vampire, AModelCat and 1 other person Thank this.
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