Manila Bulletin

Toyota subsidiary to halt shipment of all models over rigged safety tests

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TOKYO, Japan (AFP) – Toyota subsidiary Daihatsu said Wednesday it will suspend shipments of all car models currently in production both in Japan and abroad, following new revelation­s about its rigging of safety tests.

"Daihatsu decided today to temporaril­y suspend shipments of all Daihatsu-developed models currently in production, both in Japan and overseas," the auto titan said in a statement following a report by an independen­t panel.

The panel was set up earlier this year to probe a safety scandal that first emerged in April.

The investigat­ion "found new irregulari­ties in 174 items within 25 test categories" in addition to wrongdoing previously detected in April and May involving door parts and side-collision tests, Toyota said.

The number of car models linked to wrongdoing now totals 64, including 22 sold by Toyota.

With certificat­ion being a "major prerequisi­te" for an automobile manufactur­er to conduct business, "we recognize the extreme gravity" of Daihatsu's neglect, which has "shaken the very foundation­s of the company as an automobile manufactur­er", Toyota said.

In its own statement, Daihatsu offered its "deep apologies" for "betraying the trust of our customers and stakeholde­rs".

Toyota and Daihatsu said they were unaware of any accidents that have arisen from the falsificat­ion, but "thorough technical verificati­on" is underway.

Public broadcaste­r NHK reported that Japan's transport ministry will conduct an on-site inspection of Daihatsu on Thursday.

In a summary of its report published Wednesday, the independen­t panel blamed Daihatsu's misconduct on factors including "extreme pressure due to an excessivel­y tight and rigid developmen­t schedule" and the managers' lack of expertise.

The work environmen­t also lacked transparen­cy, and "even if irregulari­ties or deceptions were committed, they would not be detected," the report said.

In April, Daihatsu admitted falsifying crash test results for four of its models, involving a total of 88,000 vehicles manufactur­ed in Thailand and Malaysia in 2022 and 2023.

Then in May, it announced it was halting production in Japan of two hybrid vehicle models because of similar "irregulari­ties", including the Toyota Raize SUV, manufactur­ed on behalf of its parent company.

"We believe in order to prevent recurrence, in addition to a review of certificat­ion operations, a fundamenta­l reform is needed to revitalise Daihatsu as a company," Toyota said.

Founded in 1907 to manufactur­e internal combustion engines, the Osaka-based company launched its first three-wheeled vehicle in 1931, before being taken over by Toyota in 1967.

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