Business Standard

Suzuki, Mazda, Yamaha in a soup

- Tokyo, 9 August

Mazda Motor, Suzuki Motor and Yamaha Motor improperly tested vehicles for fuel economy and emissions, the Japanese government said on Thursday, revealing fresh cases of compliance failures by manufactur­ers.

The results came to light after the government had ordered the automakers to check their operations after revelation­s of improper testing at Subaru and Nissan Motor last year.

The conduct of automakers globally has come under intense scrutiny after Germany's Volkswagen AG admitted in 2015 to installing secret software in hundreds of thousands of US diesel cars to cheat exhaust emissions tests, and that as many as 11 million vehicles could have similar software installed worldwide.

In the Japanese cases, the carmakers have not broken any laws or prompted massive recalls. But a growing list of impropriet­ies has tarnished the image of the country’s manufactur­ing industry for highqualit­y products and efficiency.

Suzuki, Mazda and Yamaha cleared vehicles for emissions or fuel efficiency even in cases where they were tested under invalid conditions, the ministry said in a statement. The errors related to slight deviations in the speed of the vehicles during testing that should have invalidate­d the test results.

The automakers examined tests they had conducted over different periods of time and in Suzuki’s case they stretched back to 2012.

None of the automakers found significan­t problems with actual emissions and fuel economy performanc­e of the vehicles, which were destined for sale in Japan, and do not plan any recalls.

Suzuki, Japan’s fourth-largest automaker, said that of 12,819 sample vehicles tested for fuel economy and emissions since June 2012, around 50 percent of them had been in 4 per cent of similar inspection­s on its cars, or just over 70 vehicles. In Yamaha’s case, irregulari­ties were found in 2 per cent of inspection­s, or just a handful of vehicles.

Both Mazda and Yamaha apologised.

Suzuki and Yamaha shares fell 6 and 5 per cent, respective­ly, and Mazda shares were down 1 per cent, underperfo­rming a steady benchmark Nikkei average.

In July this year, Nissan admitted it had improperly measured exhaust emissions and fuel economy for 19 vehicle models sold in Japan.

Kobe Steel, Mitsubishi Materials Corp and Toray Industries — all key suppliers of motor parts to global manufactur­ers — admitted to product data fabricatio­n last year.

Many of the automakers, already hit by lacklustre sales, have also been under pressure from US President Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs on imported vehicles.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India