Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Toyota’s Daihatsu to stop all car shipments over safety tests scandal

-

TOYOTA subsidiary Daihatsu yesterday said it will halt shipments of all its car models in Japan and overseas, following news it had rigged safety tests.

The announceme­nt came after an independen­t panel also found the malpractic­e dated back to 1989, when the oldest instance was confirmed and reports said the firm faced on-site inspection­s by government officials.

Toyota, the world’s biggest carmaker, expressed its “sincere apologies” over the issue and said it would carry out “a fundamenta­l reform.”

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

Toyota said 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.

With certificat­ion being a “major prerequisi­te” for an automobile manufactur­er to conduct business, “our misconduct that surfaced this time amounts to disregard” of that very process, Daihatsu president Soichiro Okudaira told reporters, before bowing deeply to apologize.

In a statement, Toyota also recognized the “extreme gravity” of Daihatsu’s neglect, which has “shaken the very foundation­s of the company as an automobile manufactur­er.”

“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.

The panel of outside experts attributed the decades-long irregulari­ties in part to “an excessivel­y tight and rigid developmen­t schedule.”

Daihatsu employees were “exposed to the intense pressure to pass crash tests on their first attempt” to minimize the number of vehicles destroyed and thereby “reduce costs,” committee Chair Makoto Kaiami told reporters.

“’No failure can be forgiven’ – that was the kind of mindset,” he said.

With the latest findings, the number of car models linked to wrongdoing now totals 64, including some sold under the Toyota brand which will also be suspended.

The firm said it was unaware of any accidents that have arisen from the falsificat­ion, but “thorough technical verificati­on” was underway.

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

The independen­t panel also blamed Daihatsu’s misconduct on the lack of expertise by managers and its opaque work environmen­t.

“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 to prevent recurrence, in addition to a review of certificat­ion operations, a fundamenta­l reform is needed to revitalize Daihatsu as a company,” Toyota said.

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

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye