Volkswagen, BMW And Daimler Funded Emissions Testing On Monkeys

Volkswagen has been forced to apologise after revelations that one of its cars was used for testing diesel emissions on monkeys, as part of experiments funded by the German 'big three'
Volkswagen, BMW And Daimler Funded Emissions Testing On Monkeys

The Volkswagen Group has apologised in the wake of revelations that experiments partly funded by the German leviathan forced monkeys to inhale diesel fumes.

The European Research Group on Environment and Health in the Transport Sector, better known by its German initials EUGT, operated from a base in Albuquerque in the United States. It reportedly took all of its funding from the Volkswagen Group, Mercedes’ parent company Daimler and BMW.

The purpose was for it to carry out research that would defend the use of cleaner diesel tech, and to that end it hired scientists from around the world.

EUGT has been shut down since 30 June last year after details of its actions had come to light, but they only became public knowledge after a lawsuit was filed in the US.

It’s alleged that EUGT forced monkeys to sit in sealed containers, watching cartoons to keep them placid while they inhaled fumes from a diesel Volkswagen Beetle. Ironically, that Beetle was fitted with emissions cheating software that rendered any results from the experiment null and void anyway, but that sort of animal cruelty is totally unnecessary. Someone will probably – hopefully – be jailed for authorising it.

After the mainstream media picked up on the EUGT’s actions Volkswagen issued a pair of Tweets from its principal English language Twitter account. The company said that it knows that the experiments were wrong and contravened its own ethical standards. It also apologised, and twice noted that the lab had been shut down last year.

Daimler has said it is launching an investigation into what happened and how the “unnecessary and repulsive” tests could have been allowed in the first place, while BMW also distanced itself from this specific trial.

Sources: New York Times, Bloomberg

Comments

Nishant Dash

Tbh they should carry these tests on severe criminals instead of innocent animals.

01/29/2018 - 09:10 |
49 | 26

That’s equally stupid

01/29/2018 - 09:12 |
48 | 9

I’m not sure that would’ve worked. Germany already has a history of… you know what. It would have simply reflected the mad square moustache dictators reign. 😉😛

01/29/2018 - 10:05 |
23 | 1

The thing is, a murderer or terrorist would know that they are being gassed, so you can’t exactly keep them still with cartoons. Also, most criminals in jails aren’t major offenders, so it’ll be difficult to find two major criminals in the same physical health, meaning that any “research” will have to use a small sample size, making the study less reliable. But still barbaric.

01/29/2018 - 19:18 |
3 | 0
Anonymous

The plot thickens…
.

01/29/2018 - 09:12 |
0 | 0
ᴶᵘˢᵗᴬᴿᵃⁿᵈᵒá

Did PETA bust them? Find out later in the next episode

01/29/2018 - 09:55 |
6 | 0
DaReelTuna

Omg…Now we know the truth: Harambe got killed by german car engineering!

01/29/2018 - 09:59 |
30 | 0
Jakob

What a stupid hypocrisy. They want to distance them from the test they have conducted themselves. That’s like saying: “Yes, I killed the neighbour’s dog, but it’s okay because I immediately distance myself from the crime I have commited”

01/29/2018 - 10:00 |
21 | 1
Dank Raptor

In reply to by Jakob

I’m not trying to defend Volkswagen completely here, in case they actually did authorise this, but I think all they did was provide funding for the experiment, without knowing how the the EUGT would do it. Idk I could be wrong.

01/29/2018 - 11:51 |
5 | 2
Anonymous

In reply to by Jakob

Daimler seemed to handle it well. They said they would investigate and that they thought this was bad. Volkswagen did the wrong thing. They said it was shut down in June. Saying sorry and excusing it with it happened months ago is unacceptable. BMW’s approach of distancing is almost as bad as dismissing it. Maybe they should put executives from the company in a room with cartoons and make them inhale diesel exhaust from their company…

01/29/2018 - 16:17 |
3 | 0
Klush

You just cant break habits can you…

01/29/2018 - 10:15 |
14 | 1
Rahul 1

[DELETED]

01/29/2018 - 11:56 |
1 | 1

[DELETED]

01/30/2018 - 01:40 |
0 | 0
Aaron 15

Well I guess Tarzan worked at VW… my childhood is slightly ruined

01/29/2018 - 12:37 |
0 | 0
Dante Verna

I’m not sure exactly what happened, but what made them think that was a good idea?

01/29/2018 - 12:47 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

This is incredibly sad. Especially given that there are endless ways to detect the chemical components of exhaust fumes.

01/29/2018 - 18:02 |
3 | 0

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