Another failure of the regulatory agencies designed to protect us was a decade in the making.
More than a ten years ago, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency helped develop a technology that ultimately was used by an independent laboratory to catch Volkswagen’s elaborate cheating on car emissions tests. But EPA used the technology primarily to test trucks rather than passenger cars because such heavy equipment was a much bigger polluter.
That decision meant that the U.S. regulator missed its best chance to foil the German carmaker’s deception early on. The portable emissions measurement systems that EPA pioneered might have subjected VW diesel cars to on-road tests and discovered they were spewing up to 40 times the allowable levels of key pollutant nitrogen oxide under normal driving conditions.
Without that test, VW was virtually home free and evaded detection for seven years.
“If EPA had used the technology back then (on diesel cars), we could have caught it,” said Margo Oge, who was director of the EPA’s office of Transportation and Air Quality at the time and headed the office for 18 years until 2012.
“They trust the auto companies to tell the truth. And the auto companies have proven time and again that they don’t tell the truth,” said Dan Becker, director of the Safe Climate Campaign and a veteran of the fight for tougher car emissions regulation. “We can’t allow the students to test themselves and submit their own grades.”
The EPA requires carmakers to follow a test script that has not changed in more than a decade. The script must be the same, experts said, in order to compare vehicles or validate data. They put the vehicles on a dynamometer — a treadmill for cars — that accelerates and slows down at a programmed interval known as a “drive cycle.” A device measures pollutants from the tailpipe.
Aware of the script, VW installed 2009-2015 diesel models with software that sensed when the vehicles were on the treadmill and switched the emissions system to trap the right amount of nitrogen oxide. That sophisticated software algorithm sensed things such as the position of the steering wheel, speed, the duration of the engine’s operation and barometric pressure.
Out on the road, the exhaust system would switch back to allowing more pollutants to pass through the nitrogen oxide trap and spill out of the tail pipe.
Volkswagen’s 2009 Jetta and Jetta Sportwagen models passed the dynamometer tests and were certified for sale in the U.S.
EPA’s National Fuel and Vehicle Emission Laboratory in Ann Arbor, Michigan, ran spot checks on VW’s 2009 models that validated the company’s data by running an identical series of laboratory tests.
After that, emissions tests are not required at U.S. ports of entry for imported cars or at dealerships. And most states do not require owners of diesel cars to submit them to an emissions test to get a car registration renewed.
The 21 states that do test diesel vehicles usually are not equipped to catch cheaters. Most only examine data stored in on-board-diagnostics systems for a record of faults that would indicate a broken component or a maintenance problem. But in the case of the Volkswagens, if the cars were operating as designed, no fault would appear.
It was only when researchers connected with West Virginia University last year used the technology pioneered by EPA, that VW’s duplicity was finally exposed by subjecting the cars to actual road tests. Threatened with having its new models banned from the U.S. market, VW admitted the cheating.
The Associated Press contributed to this article