Mitsubishi fuel-economy fibs date back a quarter-century
TOKYO — Mitsubishi Motors Corp., the Japanese automaker that acknowledged last week that it had intentionally lied about fuel-economy data for some models, said an internal investigation found such tampering dated to 1991.
The company also was told by U.S. environmental regulators that it must do additional testing to verify gas mileage on the models it sells in the country.
President Tetsuro Aikawa told reporters Tuesday the probe was ongoing, suggesting that more irregularities might be found.
“We don’t know the whole picture and we are in the process of trying to determine that,” he said at a news conference at the transport ministry. “I feel a great responsibility.”
Aikawa said so much was unknown that it’s uncertain what action the company will take. He said he didn’t know why employees resorted to such tactics to make mileage look better.
Late Tuesday, the Environmental Protection Agency said it has told Mitsubishi to do more real world tests for all models it sells in the U.S. But the agency would not say if it suspects Mitsubishi of cheating here or whether the agency is doing its own tests.
Mitsubishi sells three car models and two SUVs in the United States.
Tokyo-based Mitsubishi Motors had repeatedly promised to come clean after a massive scandal 15 years ago involving a systematic cover-up of auto defects.
The inaccurate mileage tests involved 157,000 of its eK wagon and eK Space light passenger cars, and 468,000 Dayz and Dayz Roox vehicles produced for Nissan Motor Co.
The models are all socalled “minicars” with tiny engines whose main attraction is generally great mileage. They were produced from March 2013. The problem surfaced after Nissan pointed out inconsistencies in data.
The automaker found the company’s mileage goal for the minicars that had been set in 2011 was suddenly raised in 2013. Why that happened is unclear, according to officials.