Toronto Star

LONGTIME CHEATING

- JONATHAN SOBLE THE NEW YORK TIMES

Mitsubishi Motors now says fuel economy tests have been rigged for 25 years,

Unapproved methods used since 1991, a period covering millions of cars and trucks

TOKYO— Mitsubishi Motors admitted Tuesday that it had used improper methods to test the fuel economy of cars sold in Japan for 25 years, drasticall­y widening the scope of a mileage-doctoring scandal gripping the company.

The automaker said it still did not know exactly how many models had been given exaggerate­d fuel ratings. But it said it now believed it had been using unapproved methods since 1991 — a period that covers dozens of vehicle introducti­ons and millions of cars and trucks. The company sells a little over 100,000 vehicles in Japan a year, but in the past it sold as many as five times that.

Mitsubishi has been reviewing its tests since the revelation­s that it had cheated on ones for the mileage ratings of small-engine microcars that it sells in Japan and supplies to another Japanese automaker, Nissan, through a joint venture agreement. Nissan engineers discovered the discrepanc­y last year, the company said.

Mitsubishi gave no indication that it had cheated on tests of cars sold in other markets.

“I’m truly sorry that customers were led to buy vehicles based on incorrect fuel-efficiency ratings,” Mitsubishi’s president, Tetsuro Aikawa, said at a news conference on Tuesday. “All I can do is apologize.”

Aikawa said that Mitsubishi was still investigat­ing who ordered the cheating, and he suggested that the company may not have initially been aware that it was breaking the rules.

Last week, Aikawa said Mitsubishi employees had knowingly given the microcar line an exaggerate­d fuel rating by manipulati­ng test conditions. The company’s share price has dropped by half since then, including a nearly 10 per cent decline Tuesday.

Aikawa was repeatedly pressed Tuesday to say how many vehicles Mitsubishi now believes were affect- ed. He declined to do so, saying the company was still investigat­ing. But the use of unapproved testing methods appears to have been long prevalent. “We are examining every model,” he said.

Mitsubishi is already a much-diminished brand, especially in its home market, where its market share has shrivelled since a scandal in the 2000s. That affair also involved admissions of long-running malfeasanc­e: Officials had been hiding reports of dangerous vehicle defects for decades.

In the latest revelation­s, Mitsubishi says it cheated Japanese regulators and car buyers by using an unapproved method to measure the effect of decelerati­on during fuel-economy testing. The method, which tends to give a more flattering mileage rating, is approved in the United States but not in Japan.

 ?? TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Mitsubishi Motors president Tetsuro Aikawa said at a press conference Tuesday the company is still investigat­ing who ordered the cheating.
TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Mitsubishi Motors president Tetsuro Aikawa said at a press conference Tuesday the company is still investigat­ing who ordered the cheating.

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