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Tesla CEO Elon Musk joins call for CARB to force VW to invest in electric vehicles as “punishment” for ‘DieselGate’

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38 company and environmental group leaders, including Tesla CEO Elon Musk, signed an open letter proposing that the California Air Resources Board (CARB) lets VW off the hook in California for having cheated on reporting emissions in its diesel cars and in return, VW would be forced to significantly invest in electric vehicles or other zero-emission vehicles.

The letter suggests that CARB releases VW from its obligation to fix diesel cars already on the road in California and instead accelerate its rollout of zero emission vehicles, which they say would reduce its emissions by 10 times the amount of cheating involved with the diesel fleet in the state.

The group also proposes to require that VW invest in new manufacturing and/or research for zero-emission vehicles in California, in the amounts that they would otherwise have been fined by CARB for cheating.

The letter, which you can read in full below, suggest a 5-year timeline for VW to comply.

An Open Letter To California Air Resources Board Chairman Mary Nichols

The VW emissions scandal is mainly the result of physics meeting fiction. In the simplest terms, we have reached the point of de miminis returns in extracting performance from a gallon of diesel while reducing pollutants, at least at reasonable cost. Unsurprisingly, and despite having the greatest research and development program in diesel engines, VW had to cheat to meet current European and U.S. standards. Meeting future tighter diesel standards will prove even more fruitless.

For a significant fraction of the non-compliant diesel cars already in the hands of drivers, there is no real solution. Drivers won’t come in for a fix that compromises performance. Further, solutions which result in net greater CO2 emissions, a regulated pollutant, are inappropriate for CARB to endorse. Retrofitting urea tank systems to small cars is costly and impractical. Some cars may be fixed, but many won’t and will be crushed before they are fixed.

A giant sum of money thus will be wasted in attempting to fix cars that cannot all be fixed, and where the fix may be worse than the problem if the cars are crushed well before the end of their useful lives. We, the undersigned, instead encourage the CARB to show leadership in directing VW to “cure the air, not the cars” andreap multiples of what damage has been caused while strongly advancing California’s interests in transitioning to zero emission vehicles.

The solution we propose for VW and the CARB is to, in a legally enforceable form:

1./ Release VW from its obligation to fix diesel cars already on the road in California, which represent an insignificant portion of total vehicles emissions in the State, and which cars do not, individually, present any emissions-related risk to their owners or occupants

2./ Instead, direct VW to accelerate greatly its rollout of zero emission vehicles, which by their very nature, have zero emissions and thus present zero opportunities for cheating, and also do not require any enforcement dollars to verify

3./ Require that this acceleration of the rollout of zero emissions vehicles by VW result in a 10 for 1 or greater reduction in pollutant emissions as compared to the pollution associated with the diesel fleet cheating, and achieve this over the next 5 years

4./ Require that VW invest in new manufacturing plants and/or research and development, in the amounts that they otherwise would have been fined, and do so in California to the extent that California would have been allocated its share of the fines

5./ Allow VW some flexibility in the execution and timing of this plan by allowing it to be implemented via zero emission vehicle credits.

In contrast to the punishments and recalls being considered, this proposal would be a real win for California emissions, a big win for California jobs, and a historic action to help derail climate change.

The bottleneck to the greater availability of zero emissions vehicles is the availability of batteries. There is an urgent need to build more battery factories to increase battery supply, and this proposal would ensure that large battery plant and related investments, with their ensuing local jobs, would be made in the U.S. by VW.

A satisfactory way to fix all the diesel cars does not likely exist, so this solution side steps the great injury and uncertainty that imposing an ineffective fix would place on individual diesel car owners. A drawn out and partial failure of the process will only exacerbate the public’s lack of trust in the industry and its regulators. By explicit design, this proposal would achieve, in contrast, a minimum of a 10X reduction in pollutant emissions as compared to a complete fix.

There is a precedent for this type of resolution. In the industry-wide 1990 diesel truck cheating scandal, the EPA chose not to require an interim recall but instead moved up the deadline for tougher standards to make up the difference. This proposal does the same for VW and ties the solution to a transition to zero emissions vehicles.

We strongly urge CARB to consider this proposal in resolving the VW cheating scandal.

Ion Yadigaroglu
Partner, Capricorn Investment Group

Dipender Saluja
Partner, Capricorn Investment Group

Ira Ehrenpreis
Partner, DBL Partners

Lyndon Rive
CEO, SolarCity

Ari Swiller
Renewable Resources Group

Jigar Shah
President, Generate Capital

Adam Wolfensohn
Partner, Encourage Capital

Steve Westly
Former California State Controller

Kevin Parker
CEO, Sustainable Insight Capital

Mindy Lubber
President, Ceres

Jesse Fink
Chairman, MissionPoint

Jeffrey Tannenbaum
Chairman, sPower

Laurence Levi
Partner, VO2 Partners

Nicholas Eisenberger
Partner, Pure Energy

Peter R. Stein
Managing Director, Lyme Timber

Elon Musk
CEO, Tesla and SpaceX

Carl Pope
Inside Straight Strategies

Hal Harvey
CEO, Energy Innovation

Michael Brune
Executive Director, Sierra Club

Lawrence Bender
Producer, An Inconvenient Truth

Jason Calacanis
Angel, Launch Fund

Jason Scott
Partner, Encourage Capital

Jules Kortenhorst
CEO, Rocky Mountain Institute

Anja Manuel
Partner, RiceHadleyGates

Tom Darden
Partner, Cherokee Fund

Matt Breidert
Senior Portfolio Manager, Ecofin

Rob Davenport
Managing Partner, Brightpath Capital

Rob Day
Partner, Black Coral Capital

Marc Stuart
CEO, Allotrope Partners

Bruce Kahn
PM, Sustainable Insight Capital

Jeff Skoll
CEO, Jeff Skoll Group

Chamath Palihapitiya
CEO, Social Capital

Antonio Gracias
CEO, Valor Equity Partners

Cole Frates
Renewable Resources Group

Reuben Munger
Partner, Vision Ridge

Gregory Manuel
Partner, MNL Partners

Martin Roscheisen
CEO, Diamond Foundry

Steven Dietz
Partner, Upfront Ventures

Larry Lunt
CEO, Armonia

Panos Ninios
Partner, True Green Capital

Suhail Rizvi
CEO, Rizvi Traverse

Stuart Davidson
Chairman, Sonen

Dan Fuller
CIO, Fuller Smith

Justin Kamine
Kamine Development

Raúl Pomares
Managing Director, Sonen

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Comments

  1. Steve - 8 years ago

    So what happens to the owners of the affected diesel cars that don’t want to own them anymore and are stuck with a car that is emitting higher than allowed emissions? They just get screwed over? Thanks Elon. How about offer these owners first dibs of the new electric cars at a deeply discounted rate along with a swap out for their TDIs.

    • Edwinthewheelmaker - 8 years ago

      Thanks Elon? haven’t you seen the other 44 names?

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