The Volvo company is forced to return money for defective ones electric vehicles EX30 in Europe, which have been found to have a large number of errors and which cannot be cured quickly enough by air.
But Volvo UK says only a small number of EX30 owners have returned their cars and opted for a refund, and that the model continues to be popular in European markets.
Key malfunctions include non-functioning steering wheel buttons, failure of driver assistance systems, and resetting the car to factory settings. All of this is due to the EX30's heavy reliance on software.
This isn't the first time the EX30 has hit the news due to software flaws. The automaker has withheld some prototypes of electric vehicles to update the software to debug the systems.