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Youngman makes new Saab offer: owner

Chinese company Youngman has made a new offer for Saab to the administrators for the bankrupt Swedish car-maker, confirmed the founder and owner of the Youngman concern Pang Qingnian to Swedish daily Svenska Dagbladet (SvD).

Youngman makes new Saab offer: owner

He also said that he is ready to put in 12 billion kronor ($1.79 billion) to develop new Saab models and that cars would still be manufactured in Trollhättan in five years time.

“That’s a condition,” he told SvD adding that rich Chinese consumers prefer to buy cars manufactured in the west.

However, he also said that Saab is technology and not just a brand.

“We don’t have the capacity to develop the cars. And I would really want to keep many from the old management group.”

According to Pang Qingnian, the mass flight of the redundant workers is a problem.

“Without the employees it will be impossible. It will have to move fast now,” Pang Qingnian told the paper.

He was not willing to elaborate on the bid, which was put on the table last week, but previous information has mentioned two billion kronor. However, according to Pang Qingnian, the bid could go up should the administrators be able to show the “right evidence” that it is worth it, he said.

According to news agency TT, Pang Qingnian has long wanted a piece of the Swedish automaker, trying to buy into the company as early as 2008, long before Victor Muller was involved.

However, at the time, General Motors turned him down on the basis that they already had two Chinese partners.

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CARMAKER

VW Scandal: France to launch ‘in-depth’ probe

Update: France's Environment Minister Segolene Royal on Tuesday announced an "in-depth" investigation after Volkswagen admitted millions of cars were fitted with software that secretly thwarts pollution tests in the US.

VW Scandal: France to launch 'in-depth' probe
"This is not a minor subject, it's not about speed or the quality of leather," said the French finance minister of the VW scandal. Photo: AFP

Royal also asked French manufacturers to “ensure that such schemes are not taking place in France.”

Her announcement came after Michel Sapin on Tuesday morning told French radio that in order to “reassure” the public, it seemed “necessary” to carry out checks on cars manufactured by other European carmakers.

“We are in a European market, with European rules that need to be respected,” Sapin told Europe 1 radio.

“Even if it's just to reassure people, it seems necessary to me that (checks should be carried out) also on French carmakers,” he said, adding he had no “particular reason” to suspect wrongdoing.

According to US authorities, VW admitted that it had equipped about 482,000 cars in the United States with sophisticated software that covertly turns off pollution controls when the car is being driven and turns them on only when it detects that the car is undergoing an emissions test.

With the so-called “defeat device” deactivated, the car can spew pollutant gases into the air, including nitrogen oxide in amounts as much as 40 percent higher than emissions standards, said the US Environmental Protection Agency.

“This is not a minor subject, it's not about speed or the quality of leather,” stressed Sapin.

“What we are dealing with is making sure people avoid being poisoned by pollution,” said the minister.

German authorities have already announced an investigation into whether Volkswagen or other carmakers are doing anything similar in Germany or Europe.