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US fines Hyundai $47 mn over dirty diesel engines
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 19, 2019

South Korean automaker Hyundai will pay a $47 million fine for illegally importing and selling dirty diesel engines in violation of American environmental rules, US authorities announced Thursday.

Between 2012 and 2015, the company imported nearly 2,300 diesel-powered heavy construction vehicles with engines that did not meet US emissions standards, the US Justice Department said in a statement.

"Hyundai put profits above the public's health and the requirements of the law," Jeffrey Bossert Clark, head of the department's environment and natural resources division, said in a statement.

"We will not tolerate such schemes that skirt the Clean Air Act, designed by Congress to improve air quality."

The case began with a whistleblower tip submitted in 2015 to the US Environmental Protection Agency, which launched criminal and civil proceedings.

A US court earlier imposed a $2 million fine on the company for the clean air violations.

US officials say the Hyundai diesel engines were not certified to meet emissions standards for particulate matter and nitrogen oxide, both of which contribute to disease and premature death.


Related Links
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Protests against German car industry rev up in Frankfurt
Frankfurt Am Main (AFP) Sept 14, 2019
Thousands of protesters, many on bicycles, gathered in the southern German city of Frankfurt Saturday to protest outside the city's motor show, part of a new wave of environmental activism. Between 15,000 and 25,000 people - according to estimates from the police and the organisers respectively - turned out calling for radical change, in a sign of growing impatience with the motor industry. Campaigners are pressing Germany's car industry to go green and abandon internal combustion engines. Sat ... read more

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