Last Friday, Sept. 18, the
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that it had discovered a
"defeat device" installed in nearly half a million diesel vehicles
made by Volkswagen (VW) and sold in the U. S. from 2009 to 2015. Specifically, EPA claims that VW
engineers have admitted to designing and installing software that implements
full emissions controls on their diesel engines only when the software detects
that the car is undergoing emissions testing. The rest of the time, some of the emissions controls are
disabled, allowing the vehicle to produce as much as forty times the maximum
allowed levels of NOx, a type of pollutant that can lead to respiratory
problems and smog. When queried
about the accusations, VW spokespersons declined comment, citing the ongoing
investigation.
Until VW has their day in
court, or wherever this case ends up, fairness dictates that we give them the
benefit of the doubt. But when
both the EPA and the California Air Resources Board (CARB) issue notices that
VW is in violation of clean-air ordinances, citing admissions made by VW
personnel, it's a fairly safe bet that something is amiss.
In 2014, some researchers at
West Virginia University who were working for the International Council on
Clean Transportation discovered that certain VW diesels emitted far more
pollutants when operating under actual road conditions than one would expect
from the fact that they are certified by the EPA for sale in the U. S. When the researchers notified the EPA
about this, EPA asked VW about it, and VW said they would issue a recall to
recalibrate the systems involved, which they did in December of 2014. However, the California Air Resources
Board checked some of the supposedly fixed VWs in May of 2015, and found that
some of them were still out of compliance—hence, more meetings with VW. According to a letter from the CARB,
its staff and EPA staff held a technical meeting with VW personnel on Sept. 3,
2015. Reading between the lines, we
can surmise that the question they asked was along the lines of, "Okay,
guys, what's really going on here?"
Faced with the inevitable, VW admitted that they had deliberately
designed the vehicle's software to detect an official emissions test, and to
turn on all the pollution controls only during testing. The rest of the time, some of the
controls were inactive.
Faced with this smoking gun
(so to speak), EPA and CARB had no choice but to declare the affected vehicles
in violation and to order VW to issue a recall to remove the defeat-device
software.
As it turns out, if the
allegations prove true this isn't the first time that regulators have found
diesel-engine defeat devices deployed on a massive scale. Back in 1998, diesels in trucks and
construction machinery made by Caterpillar, Renault, and Volvo were found to
have two different sets of software.
One set was used when the EPA was running emissions tests on the
engines, and adjusted the injection timing for low NOx emissions. The second set of software used a
different injection timing that delivered better fuel economy, but also caused
more NOx emissions. The
manufacturers ended up paying about a billion-dollar fine for that
infraction.
There seems to be
something about software that tempts engineers to bend the rules. With hardware, it's relatively easy to
dig into the machinery and find the gizmo that's doing its nefarious
work—that's the kind of thing that the term "defeat device" brings to
mind. It reminds me of a scene
from the autobiography of Vannevar Bush, who was in charge of the U. S. Office
of Scientific Research and Development during World War II. In the 1920s, he was a professor at MIT
and got involved with a startup company named Raytheon. At the time, Raytheon's hot product was
a type of rectifier tube that was useful in the rapidly growing production of
radios that operated from power-line current (earlier radios used messy and
expensive batteries). In a dispute
with rival radio manufacturer Westinghouse, Bush claimed that Westinghouse was
using Raytheon's patented tube structure.
The patent attorney for the rival firm rival denied it. In response, Bush told Westinghouse's
patent attorney to pick up a Westinghouse tube (which had an opaque coating on
the glass) and crack it over a trash can. He did so, and there was Raytheon's patented tube
structure. As Bush put it, the
patent attorney agreed to advise his client Westinghouse to "keep off the
grass."
You can't do that sort
of dramatic stunt with software so easily. If the accessible form of the software involved is in the
form of machine code (which it usually is in production systems), often nobody other
than the people who wrote it can really tell what it does. So sneaky evasions such as the one VW
engineers are accused of doing with the defeat-device software are hard to pin
down, which means that indirect evidence such as performance measurements have
to be used instead. And it's not
often that regulatory agencies go to such trouble to track down
violations. Further investigation
may reveal exactly who at VW was responsible for the defeat-device software,
and how high in the firm the decision was made. And then, if the charges are proven, VW will have to pay—at
least with a recall fixing the problem, and perhaps with fines or other
penalties.
The contrast
between the way cars used to pollute before environmental regulations and what
comes out the tailpipe today was brought home to me recently when we started
working on a 1955 Oldsmobile owned by my late father-in-law. It now starts up pretty reliably
without help, but whenever it does, a blue cloud appears behind it and the
sharp tang of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) fills the air. Exhaust just doesn't smell like that
any more, by and large, and that's thanks to catalytic converters, selective
catalytic reduction for diesels that uses urea to reduce NOx emissions, and
many other measures that make the air cleaner than it would otherwise be.
If the charges
against VW prove to be true, that firm will have the opportunity to make the
air behind its cars even cleaner.
And we will all be thankful for that.
Sources:
Numerous news outlets carried reports of the EPA's press release of
Sept. 18, which can be found on the EPA website at yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/21b8983ffa5d0e4685257dd4006b85e2/dfc8e33b5ab162b985257ec40057813b!OpenDocument. I referred to reports on the issue by
the Washington Post at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2015/09/18/epa-volkswagen-used-defeat-device-to-circumvent-air-pollution-controls/
and a letter from the CARB at http://www.arb.ca.gov/newsrel/in_use_compliance_letter.htm. I also
referred to an article on the 1998 defeat-device actions in the Los Angeles
Times for Oct. 23, 1998 at http://articles.latimes.com/1998/oct/23/news/mn-35220.
The patent dispute between
Raytheon and Westinghouse is described on p. 198 of Vannevar Bush, Pieces of the Action (William Morrow,
1970).
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