Given VAG's 'form' on honesty in recent years, I'd reserve judgement until these engines have been around for a decent amount of time. Besides - modern, efficient petrol-engined cars (especially the best turbo-petrols) can easily match a diesel for fuel efficiency on short trips because they get warmed up quicker, are lighter, in addition to the fuel price being generally cheaper and the purchase cost of the car being lower.
Unless you're regularly lugging heavy loads around, owning a diesel for low annual mileage and/or mostly short trips is a waste of money, in my opinion.
Any diesel's DPF will clog up - it's just how well the car can deal with the forced regens that is the key to how they can cope with short journeys. Either way, they use extra fuel and/or adblue to help reduce the gunk or clear/burn it away, which in the end reduces mpg and costs more than if no DPF were present.
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