Waterloo Region Record

Japan’s Kobe Steel reports wider fudging of metals data

- Elaine Kurtenbach The Associated Press

TOKYO — Steel maker Kobe Steel has apologized after finding wider problems, dating back to 2011, with faked inspection­s data for metals used in many products, including cars, bullet trains, aircraft and appliances.

Kobe Steel’s president, Hiroya Kawasaki, bowed deeply in a formal apology Thursday, lamenting that “Trust in our company has dropped to zero.”

He promised a senior trade ministry official that the company, Japan’s thirdlarge­st steelmaker, would provide results of safety inspection­s within two weeks and a report on the cause of the problem within a month.

Akihiro Tada, director of the ministry’s Manufactur­ing Industries Bureau, urged the company to move quickly in resolving the problems, which are thought to have affected many of the country’s largest manufactur­ers.

The company said in a statement late Wednesday that it had uncovered manipulati­on of data on steel powder used in metallurgy and also on high-tech materials used to create films used in computer chips. The government has urged Kobe Steel to clarify the extent of the misconduct.

The latest discovery was of falsificat­ion of data on 140 tons of steel powder supplied to one customer in fiscal 2016, between April 2016 and March 2017.

Another case involved 6,611 items of sputtering target materials shipped to 70 customers beginning in November 2011. Kobe Steel said it had failed to carry out tests it had agreed to conduct, and improperly “rewrote” inspection data.

But it said most of those materials, used to deposit thin films from various materials onto components such as computer chips, were reinspecte­d and are thought to have met customers’ specificat­ions.

Earlier the company said that in the year up to Aug. 31 it had sold materials such as aluminum flat-rolled products, aluminum extrusions, copper strips, copper tubes and aluminum castings and forgings using falsified data on such things as the products’ strength.

The government has asked the company to provide more informatio­n about the products supplied to more than 200 Kobe Steel customers, reportedly including some of the country’s biggest manufactur­ers, including defence contractor Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and a number of automakers.

It was unclear if the total of 40,900 tons of products involved included shipments to other countries.

“We have confirmed that aluminum from Kobe Steel is used in the hoods and doors of some of our vehicles,” Nissan said in an email. “As hoods are related to pedestrian safety, we are working to quickly assess any potential impact on vehicle functional­ity.”

Toyota also confirmed that the material has been used in hoods and rear doors of some of its vehicles. “Putting the utmost priority on the safety of our customers, we are rapidly working to identify which vehicle models might be subject to this situation and what components were used, as well as what effect there might be on individual vehicles,” Toyota said in a statement. “At the same time, we are considerin­g what measures need to be put in place going forward.”

Aircraft maker Boeing said it, too, is looking into the problem but had no reason to believe it was a safety concern.

Kobe Steel said it discovered the violations during internal inspection­s and “emergency quality audits.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada