Back in September, the U. S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) accused Volkswagen of cheating with regard to emissions controls
of many of its cars that use diesel engines. VW admitted as much, its CEO resigned, and now the firm faces
the problem of fixing all the cars that violate emissions standards. One way or another, some 11 million
cars worldwide are implicated, with about half a million in the U. S.
alone. How did VW get into this
fix, and how are they going to dig themselves out?
As new information has emerged on exactly how the
cheating was done, it's pretty easy to tell that this was no single-line
software tweak by a lone rogue engineer.
According to a Nov. 4 BBC report, someone (probably several someones)
designed software to detect when the car was on a test stand designed for EPA
checks. This typically involves
running the car while it is on a dynamometer, which uses rollers underneath the
wheels to load the engine to simulate actual road conditions. But in order for the stationary test
equipment to be connected to the vehicle, the car is usually sitting still in a
laboratory somewhere during the test.
I'm not saying that I know how the software guys did it, but if I were
faced with the problem of how to figure out if a test-stand situation like this
was going on, I'd look at the built-in accelerometers that every
airbag-equipped car has. If
nobody's at the steering wheel and the car isn't going anyplace even if it's in
"drive" and the engine's running, chances are it's on a test
stand.
However they did it, when an emission-test situation
was detected the car switched into a mode that made it pass the emissions
test. But the price was severely
crippled power and lowered engine performance, which however would not
typically show up on an emissions test—after all, nobody's actually driving it
to tell. Once the test was over,
the software readjusted the engine settings to produce normal power and
performance—and as much as forty times more nitrous oxides (NOx) than the EPA
allows. But hey—it passed the
test. That's all that counts,
right?
This mode of cheating is why fixing the problem with
many diesel models, especially older ones, is not going to be some simple
reload-new-software exercise. If
you've gone on a road trip recently and looked around in a truck-stop
convenience store, you may have noticed piles of plastic bottles full of
something called "diesel exhaust fluid." Turns out that this stuff is now needed for many
tractor-trailer diesel engines in order to meet the EPA's requirements for NOx
emissions. There's machinery on
board the truck that squirts the fluid—which contains urea—into the exhaust,
and the urea solution vaporizes to form ammonia and carbon dioxide. The ammonia, in the presence of a catalyst
in a thing called a selective catalytic reduction system (SCR), combines with
the nasty NOx molecules to form nitrogen and water, which finally leave the
exhaust pipe and rejoin Mother Nature, leaving her nearly as pristine as she
was before the truck came by.
It's one thing for truck engineers to see the
regulations coming down the pike, and take time to redesign the power plant so
as to accommodate another anti-pollution system which requires valves, heaters
to keep the urea solution from freezing, pipes, level-monitoring systems, and
all the other stuff needed to do the NOx-killing job. It's quite another thing for VW to be under the gun to
retrofit small diesel passenger cars that are maybe four or five years old,
with a kit of SCR stuff they were not designed to have. You'll need someplace to stick the SCR
unit in the exhaust line, a way to get a pipe from the SCR to the urea tank, a
place to put the urea tank, control lines, etc. Engineers estimate the cost per vehicle could range up to
$1000 or more. With some cars, it
may be cheaper for VW simply to buy them back from the owners and send them to
the scrapyard. Software-only fixes
may be possible for some diesel models, but it looks like millions of cars
worldwide will need expensive hardware installations to meet current emissions
requirements.
VW says its internal investigation into how all this
happened is still continuing. For
their sake, I hope they wind it up pretty soon, at least well enough to publish
a timeline with names and actions.
But even without such information, it's obvious by now that deception
with regard to emissions controls was an established policy. Maybe the conspiracy—that's not too
strong a term at this point—was concealed from upper management, and that's one
of the things we need to know. But
even if it was, it's clear that there was a group of engineers inside VW who
deliberately set out to cheat the system of pollution controls. And they got away with it for several
years.
It's not often that such a clear-cut case of wrongdoing
by engineers makes the headlines.
Far more often, engineers will face a dilemma in which either choice has
advantages and disadvantages, both morally and otherwise. And sometimes engineers make the wrong
choice, basing their decisions on incomplete information. But in most engineering situations,
information is always incomplete.
There's always more you'd like to know, but at some point the project
must go on, choices must be made, and sometimes they turn out to be wrong ones.
But the VW emissions case is different. Deception was intended from the
start. I don't know what internal
company dynamics brought pressure to bear on engineers to the extent that
developing a software evasion of emissions controls seemed like a good idea,
but clearly something was wrong with the way ethical principles were stated and
handed down.
Sometimes, companies who do bad things are unrepentant
and fight tooth and nail despite being in the wrong. In such cases, large government fines are sometimes the only
thing that will make an impression.
But in VW's case, its CEO resigned, sales are dropping, and there are
news stories with graphics that show the famed chrome VW emblem breaking
apart. It's starting to look like
the market and news media will do more punishing than the EPA is likely to
do. Whether that's fair or not is
almost beside the point. To
survive, VW will have to own up fully, fix the mess it made to the best of its
ability, and be a different company from the inside out—from now on.
Sources: An Associated Press article
on the types of fixes needed by VW was published in numerous outlets, including
the U. S. News and World Report website
on Nov. 19 at http://www.usnews.com/news/business/articles/2015/11/19/vw-has-only-a-few-costly-options-to-fix-polluting-diesels. Information on the details of how the
cheating software worked was carried by the BBC on Nov. 4 at http://www.bbc.com/news/business-34324772. I also referred to the Wikipedia
article on diesel exhaust fluid. I last
blogged on the VW emissions scandal on Sept. 21, 2015.
The ethical void goes way back with VW. If you look at the " valve stem seal material problem" that occurred in the 1970's and the way it was handled by VW you can see the same lack of ethical behavior.
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