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Volvo Group agrees to $197 million settlement with California over excess truck emissions

By Thomson Reuters May 18, 2026 | 12:42 PM

HELSINKI/WASHINGTON, May 18 (Reuters) – Truckmaker Volvo Group on Monday agreed to a $197 million settlement with the California Air Resources Board over alleged ​violations of the state’s heavy-duty engine ‌regulations.

The settlement resolves allegations that Volvo failed to properly disclose auxiliary emission control devices in over 10,000 of its 2010-2016 model year heavy-duty engines in California that ‌resulted ​in emissions in excess of ⁠regulatory limits, CARB said.

Volvo ⁠will pay $13 million in civil penalties, $71 million to CARB’s Air Pollution Control Fund, spend $108 million on California emissions‑reduction projects and reimburse $5 million ​of CARB’s costs, the truckmaker said.

• As part of the settlement, Volvo will make ⁠software updates and a partial ⁠warranty extension available for about 7,200 ​engines in California.

• CARB said Volvo acted transparently ​and in good faith in explaining and improving ‌emissions control devices and fully cooperated with the state investigation.

• Volvo said the settlement is without admission of liability and that an internal ⁠review found no evidence of bad faith.

• The company said it would take a $197 million charge to ⁠its second-quarter ‌operating results that will be excluded ⁠from adjusted operating income and that ​the ‌operating cash-flow impact in the ongoing ​quarter would ⁠be $89 million, with the remaining cash outflows spread over the next five years.

• The Volvo Group will report its second-quarter results on July 17.

(Reporting by Essi Lehto and David Shepardson, editing by ​Tomasz Janowski)