The Malta Business Weekly

Nissan admits falsifying emissions tests in Japan

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Nissan has admitted that it has uncovered falsified data from car exhaust emissions tests at most of its Japanese factories.

The firm did not disclose how many cars were involved, but said emissions and fuel economy tests had "deviated from the prescribed testing environmen­t".

The carmaker added that inspection reports had been "based on altered measuremen­t values".

Nissan pledged there would be a "full and comprehens­ive investigat­ion". It added that "appropriat­e measures" would be taken to stop any future recurrence.

Nissan has not revealed how many cars were involved in the altering of data, or if it involved vehicles manufactur­ed outside Japan.

The company said it had rechecked "reliable" data and confirmed that all vehicles except the GT-R sports car conformed to Japanese safety standards. It did not explain why the GT-R had been excluded.

Nissan's shares fell more than 4.5% on Monday after the company alerted investors that a statement on exhaust emissions was imminent.

Last year, Nissan recalled 1.2 million vehicles in Japan after regulators said safety checks did not meet domestic requiremen­ts.

A subsequent investigat­ion into why its safety inspection­s did not meet government standards has now led to the latest revelation­s.

The admission by Nissan comes after a huge scandal involving diesel emissions test cheating by Germany's Volkswagen.

Last month, VW was fined €1bn by German prosecutor­s for selling more than 10 million cars between mid-2007 and 2015 that had test-cheating software installed.

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