SEOUL, Feb. 6 (Korea Bizwire) — South Korea’s antitrust regulator said Sunday it has decided to fine Mercedes-Benz 20.2 billion won (US$16.87 million) for falsified information on gas emissions of its diesel cars and ordered it to take corrective actions.
Mercedes-Benz was found to have tampered with pollution mitigation devices by installing illegal software in its cars, which made them perform at lower levels in ordinary driving conditions than during certification tests, according to the Fair Trade Commission (FTC).
The rigging means that the vehicles failed to meet permissible emission levels, but the German automaker falsified related facts in signs attached to its cars between April 2012 and November 2018, according to the commission.
The Korean unit also advertised that the vehicles’ nitrogen oxide emissions remained at a minimum level and they fully met the Euro 6 emission standards.
Such false ads were on a total of 15 models, and they had run on its catalog, magazines and press releases between August 2013 and December 2016, according to the commission.
“Though Mercedes-Benz claimed that it only used typical phrases about well-known performances of the emission mitigation devices, concealing the intentional implementation of illegal software and claiming its vehicles perform the best are beyond simple exaggeration and deception,” the regulator said in a release.
“Such practices will or are feared to hurt fair market order by preventing consumers from making a reasonable decision,” it added.
Last year, the regulator either imposed a fine or ordered corrective steps for Audi-Volkswagen Korea, Nissan Motor Corp., Stellantis Korea and Porsche AG for similar emissions rigging incidents.
(Yonhap)