Khaleej Times

New mess set to dent Kobe Steel

- Yuka Obayashi Planes, trains and automobile­s Reuters

tokyo — The cheating crisis engulfing Kobe Steel just got bigger.

Chief executive Hiroya Kawasaki on Friday revealed that about 500 companies had received its falsely certified products, more than double its earlier count, confirming widespread wrongdoing at the steelmaker that has sent a chill along global supply chains.

The scale of the misconduct at Japan’s third-largest steelmaker pummelled its shares as investors, worried about the financial impact and legal fallout, wiped about $1.8 billion off its market value this week.

As the company revealed tampering of more products, the crisis has rippled through supply chains across the world in a body blow to Japan’s reputation as a high-quality manufactur­ing destinatio­n.

A contrite Kawasaki told a briefing the firm plans to pay customers’ costs for any affected products.

“There has been no specific requests, but we are prepared to shoulder such costs after consultati­ons,” he said, adding the products with tampered documentat­ion account for about four per cent of the sales in the affected businesses.

Yoshihiko Katsukawa, a managing executive officer at the company, told reporters that 500 companies were now known to be affected by the tampering.

Kobe Steel initially said 200 firms were affected when it admitted at the weekend it had falsified data about the quality of aluminium and copper products used in cars, aircraft, space rockets and defence equipment.

Asked if he plans to step down, Kawasaki said: “My biggest task right now is to help our customers make safety checks and to craft prevention measures.” Boeing has some of the falsely certified products, a source with knowledge of the matter told Reuters, while stressing that the world’s biggest maker of passenger jets does not consider the issue a safety problem.

More than 30 non-Japanese customers had been affected by the firm’s data fabricatio­n, the Nikkei newspaper reported on Friday.

A Kobe Steel spokesman said the companies received its products but would not confirm they had any of the falsely certified components.

Nuclear power plant parts are the latest to join the list of affected equipment as Fukushima nuclear operator Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) said on Friday it had taken delivery of pipes from Kobe Steel that were not checked properly.

The pipes were delivered to its Fukushima Daini station, located near the destroyed Fukushima Daiichi plant, but have not been used, Tepco said, adding it was checking all its facilities.

Faulty parts have also been found in Japan’s famous bullet trains that run at speeds as high as around 300km (180 miles) per hour and a space rocket that was launched in Japan earlier this week.

One bullet train operator has already said it will seek compensati­on from Kobe Steel.

The government has ordered Kobe Steel to address safety concerns within about two weeks and report on how the misconduct occurred in a month. Credibilit­y ‘zero’ No safety issues have yet been identified in the unfolding imbroglio.

Kobe Steel shares fell nearly nine per cent on Friday and have fallen more than 40 per cent since the scandal broke.

The steelmaker faces a range of legal risks, including compensati­on sought by clients or their customers, penalties for violating unfair competitio­n laws for false representa­tion, shareholde­r lawsuits for the fall in the company’s stock price and class lawsuits from overseas customers seeking punitive damages, a lawyer, specialisi­ng in corporate laws and risk management, said.

“It is hard to predict the extent of legal costs,” said Motokazu Endo, a lawyer at Tokyo Kasumigase­ki law office. “We cannot rule out the possibilit­y that this will shake Kobe Steel to its foundation.”

The company has forecast a profit for the year through March 2018 after two successive annual losses. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Kobe Steel president and chief executive officer Hiroya Kawasaki bowing — a gesture of apologisin­g in Japan — during a news conference in Tokyo on Friday. —
Reuters Kobe Steel president and chief executive officer Hiroya Kawasaki bowing — a gesture of apologisin­g in Japan — during a news conference in Tokyo on Friday. —

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