The Borneo Post

Nissan admits falsifying emissions data on Japan-made cars

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TOKYO: Nissan admitted yesterday that data on exhaust emissions and fuel economy had been deliberate­ly “altered”, dealing a blow to the Japanese car giant's efforts to recover trust after an inspection scandal last year.

The company did not say how many cars were affected by the falsificat­ions, which were uncovered during voluntary tests of all parts of Nissan's operations conducted in the wake of last year's scandal.

It said tests on exhaust emissions and fuel economy had “deviated from the prescribed testing environmen­t”.

In addition, it said inspection reports had been drawn up “based on altered measuremen­t values”.

Nissan's share price dropped 4.56 per cent to 1,003.5 yen after it said it would make a statement on exhaust measuremen­ts following a report of falsificat­ion. It made the statement after the market had closed.

The firm vowed a “full and comprehens­ive investigat­ion” into its latest fake data scandal.

Nissan said it had rechecked “reliable” data and confirmed that all vehicles, except the GT-R, had met Japanese safety standards.

It did not offer additional informatio­n about the GT-R, which the firm describes on its website as a high-performanc­e sports car.

“Nissan has also re-verified log data to confirm that all models subject to sampling tests guarantee the Nissan catalogue specificat­ions for fuel economy, meaning there are no errors within the fuel economy figures disclosed by Nissan,” the statement added.

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