Currently reading: German government orders investigation into Porsche emissions

V6 diesel-engined versions of the Porsche Cayenne SUV are now reportedly implicated in the Dieselgate emissions scandal

The Porsche Cayenne has been dragged into the Volkswagen Group emissions scandal, with the German Ministry of Transport ordering an investigation.

Der Spiegel reports that V6 TDI versions of the Cayenne are implicated, with emissions from the car in excess of the legal limit in Germany. 

Porsche was accused last year of using a device that manipulated the car’s emissions based on how much steering input was detected, although a Porsche source previously said that no system of this type was installed on any Porsche vehicle. 

Shortly before this, Porsche SE - the holding company that owns majority shares in Volkswagen - revealed a pot of more than three quarters of a billion pounds set aside for lawsuits surrounding the Dieselgate emissions scandal.

Audi was last month pulled back into the scandal, following fresh accusations of cheating on the A7 and A8, with a steering wheel-based defeat device blamed. 

Porsche released the following statement on the issue: "Der Spiegel has conducted joint tests with TÜV Nord on a Porsche Cayenne V6 TDI (Euro 6) and has reported on its findings in its latest edition. Porsche has obtained extracts of these results and considers them to be implausible. As a result of the Der Spiegel test, Porsche has conducted tests on a comparable Cayenne V6 TDI (Euro 6). The tests found that the vehicle was compliant with the legally stipulated nitric oxide limit values. Furthermore, Porsche has offered to conduct joint tests, but Der Spiegel has not accepted this offer. 

Porsche cooperates fully with the authorities. We also liaise with the German Federal Motor Transport Authority (KBA) on all current issues. 

As the regulatory emissions authority responsible for the homologation of our vehicles, the KBA confirmed to us that the EU6-certified Cayenne V6 TDI vehicle model referenced by Der Spiegel is compliant with regulations. We provided the KBA with the information regarding the functions of the Cayenne V6 TDI that relate to emissions certification and will continue to take this approach."

Read more: 

Audi accused of new emissions cheat on A7 and A8

Bosch created Volkswagen Dieselgate cheat software, study alleges

VW emissions scandal: one year on

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80sXS 13 June 2017

Well...

it was only a matter of time.
steve-p 12 June 2017

Not surprising

At this point, it would be more surprising if there was a VAG diesel that was not implicated. Eventually, it will be shown to be all of them, most likely.
fadyady 12 June 2017

Hail Spiegel

If this magazine did not carry out these tests with its own money Angela's corrupted and collusive government had almost let Porsche go scot free. As for Porsche protesting their innocence it's simply part two of Volkswagen's alleged innocence a year and a half ago in the US. Next they would be we have done it buy can you prove it. Shame on Muller since he was the Porsche chief in the days when Porsche deployed that cheat software in their SUVs.