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						Australia sues Volkswagen 
						over alleged emissions fraud 
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		 [September 01, 2016] 
		By Byron Kaye 
 SYDNEY (Reuters) - The Australian consumer 
		watchdog on Thursday said it had sued the Australian arm of world No. 2 
		carmaker Volkswagen AG for intentionally selling more than 57,000 
		vehicles with software which lied about levels of toxic emissions.
 
 "These allegations involve extraordinary conduct of a serious and 
		deliberate nature by a global corporation," Australian Competition and 
		Consumer Commission Chairman Rod Sims said in a statement.
 
 The Federal Court action adds to what is already proving to be costly 
		legal fallout for the German company as it faces class action lawsuits 
		in Australia and around the world over emissions fraud, as well as 
		penalties from antitrust authorities.
 
 Already in Australia, law firm Maurice Blackburn is seeking more than 
		A$100 million ($75 million) from the company, including the full 
		replacement cost of some 90,0000 vehicles, while the auto giant has 
		agreed to pay its 650 U.S. dealers $1.2 billion in compensation.
 
 In Australia, the ACCC said it wanted the company to make public 
		declarations of misconduct, pay unspecified financial penalties and 
		issue corrective advertising in relation to its actions over five years.
 
 "Volkswagen engaged in multiple breaches of the Australian consumer law 
		by concealing software in their vehicles to cheat emissions testing and 
		misleading consumers about the vehicles' compliance," Sims said.
 
		
		 
			
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"Consumers rightly expect that their vehicle's emissions would operate as 
advertised during their day-to-day use and we allege that this was not the 
case."
 Volkswagen Group Australia said in a statement that it doubted the ACCC's action 
would benefit consumers since it planned to give them software which corrected 
the emissions data as soon as it was approved by the government - likely by 
year-end.
 
 The Volkswagen unit, which is defending the private class action, said it was 
reviewing the ACCC's claims.
 
 
(Reporting by Byron Kaye; Editing by Richard Pullin, Stephen Coates and Joseph 
Radford) 
				 
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