Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hyundai aims to improve safety

New team promises to straighten out vehicle track record

- TOM KRISHER

DETROIT — Clogged oil ports, electrical shorts and leaking brake fluid are only some of the safety problems that have caused multiple fires and forced Hyundai and Kia to recall millions of vehicles in the past seven years.

Now, Hyundai, the larger of the two affiliated Korean automakers, has promoted its North American safety chief to global status — an implicit acknowledg­ment by the company that it needs to address safety in a more robust way.

The executive, Brian Latouf, who joined Hyundai in 2019 after 27 years at General Motors, says he will focus on data analysis and testing to detect problems earlier and fix them.

As part of the company’s intensifie­d focus on safety, Hyundai is building a $51.6 million laboratory near Ann Arbor, Mich., with an electronic scanner to examine parts for problems. On the site, the company will test vehicle maneuvers, including steering and braking, and evaluate electric vehicle batteries. An outdoor track will allow vehicles to accelerate to roadway speeds so testers can detect problems.

The laboratory is scheduled to be completed in the fall of next year.

Besides elevating Latouf to global safety chief, Hyundai has anointed a new vice president for safety to try to ensure that safety is taken more fully into account in the design of new vehicles. Latouf, a mechanical engineer by training, said the company wants to detect problems fast and take action.

“You have to have a real good emerging-issues data analytics office, investigat­e quickly and address them,” Latouf, 58, said in an interview with The Associated Press. “If you let them linger, risk grows, the safety hazard grows.”

Latouf now has in place a safety team at the corporate headquarte­rs in Seoul. And the safety group in North America has grown from 12 employees, when he started at the company, to 40 now.

The job is huge. The Center for Auto Safety, a nonprofit group that successful­ly petitioned U.S. regulators to seek Hyundai and Kia recalls, says the automakers have recalled 8.4 million vehicles for fires and engine problems since 2015. More than two dozen of the recalls involved more than 20 models from the 2006 through 2021 model years.

In addition, the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion is investigat­ing 3 million vehicles made by the automakers from the 2011 through 2016 model years. The safety agency says it’s received 161 complaints of engine fires, some of which occurred in vehicles that had already been recalled.

The agency, which began an engineerin­g analysis late last year, has said it will evaluate whether previous recalls covered enough vehicles. It also will monitor the effectiven­ess of recalls, “as well as the long-term viability of related programs and non-safety field actions being conducted by Hyundai and Kia.”

In June 2018, the Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion said it had received owner complaints of more than 3,100 fires, 103 injuries and one death. Hyundai and Kia were fined by the agency in 2020 for moving too slowly to recall vehicles that were prone to engine failures.

One critic, Michael Brooks, acting executive director of the Center for Auto Safety, noted that Hyundai’s upgraded safety programs are focused on future vehicles, which Brooks said won’t help owners of the company’s existing autos.

The center, Brooks said, continues to receive complaints of engine failures that Hyundai and Kia won’t fix because owners didn’t sign up in time for a company-issued knock sensor to detect engine problems.

“There’s still a consumer issue that’s ongoing that needs to be resolved,” Brooks said.

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