Volvo Group to pay $196.5 million in CARB settlement for California emissions violations
Volvo Group has agreed to pay $196.5 million in penalties and emission-reduction projects to settle with the California Air Resources Board.
$196.5 million
7,200
$108 million
What Happened
Volvo Group North America has reached a settlement with the California Air Resources Board (CARB), agreeing to pay $12.5 million in civil penalties, $71.0 million to CARB’s Air Pollution Control Fund, and $108 million on California emission-reduction projects. The company will also reimburse $5 million of CARB costs. Volvo proactively disclosed the issues nearly a decade ago and cooperated with CARB.
USD 196.5 millionUSD
Negative impact in Q2 2026, excluded from adjusted operating income.
- USD 12.5 million in civil penalties
- USD 71.0 million to CARB’s Air Pollution Control Fund
- USD 108 million for California emission-reduction projects
- USD 5 million reimbursement of CARB costs
As part of the settlement, Volvo will offer software updates and a partial warranty extension for about 7,200 model year 2014-2016 engines in California. The company states there are no performance or safety issues with the engines and that it is not aware of any additional investigations.
Why this matters
The settlement addresses emissions compliance for about 7,200 engines with software updates and warranty extensions, highlighting regulatory enforcement in the trucking industry.
Terms in This Story
- CARB
- California Air Resources Board, the state agency responsible for regulating air pollution and emissions.
- Civil penalties
- Fines imposed for violating regulations, typically not involving criminal charges.
- Warranty extension
- Extending the period during which the manufacturer will cover repairs for certain defects.
Summarised from the linked release; details can be imperfect — always verify against the original source.