Toyota
expands Takata air bag recall in Japan, China
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[December 04, 2014] By
Mari Saito and Chang-Ran Kim
TOKYO (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp said on
Thursday it would call back 190,000 more vehicles to replace potentially
defective air bags made by Takata Corp, and Japan's regulator said it
may change its recall system to better respond to what it called an
"unprecedented" crisis.
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The transport ministry, which also acts as the auto industry
regulator, told reporters it was considering revising parts of the
existing recall system, but gave no details.
"Changing the law would be a lot more involved, but there are things
we can change outside the law," said Masato Sahashi, head of the
ministry's recall division. "What we're considering is not something
that would take as long as a month or two."
In the United States, the auto safety regulator, the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), has come under fire
for not moving quickly enough to ensure wider recalls of cars fitted
with possibly defective air bags.
Toyota's recall follows an explosion of a Takata-made air bag
inflator in a 2003-model Toyota subcompact at a scrapyard in Japan
last month, though the cause of the potential problem is still
unknown, the ministry said.
Toyota said it would recall 185,000 vehicles across 19 models
including the Corolla and Alphard in Japan, and 5,000 in China, as a
preventative measure and to investigate the cause. It said it was
not aware of injuries or deaths related to the problem. The vehicles
subject to the recall were produced between September 2002 and
December 2003.
Toyota said the recall covers vehicles of the same model year as the
Will Cypha car that exploded in a scrapyard last month and that were
equipped with the same type of inflator. Those inflators were made
at Takata's Monclova factory in Mexico, it said.
The Mexican government is requesting information from Takata's local
unit to determine which car models have used its products. Takata
has until Friday to respond to the request.
Japan's transport ministry said it instructed other automakers to
check whether their vehicles could be affected by the same inflator
problem. A spokesman for Honda Motor, Takata's biggest customer,
said the company was looking into the issue, but did not elaborate.
Nearly 2.8 million cars have been recalled in Japan, and over 16
million worldwide since 2008.
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For the cars being recalled, Toyota said it will replace front
passenger-side air bag inflators or disable the air bag system and
warn against sitting in the passenger seat if a replacement is not
immediately available.
Takata's inflators have been linked to five deaths, in the United
States and Malaysia, exploding too forcefully and spraying metal
shards inside cars.
Takata this week rejected an order by NHTSA to declare its inflators
defective and expand an investigative recall in hot and humid
regions to the rest of the country. It said its own data did not
support the need for such a move, and that doing so could divert
replacement parts from the areas that need them most.
A Japanese ministry official said that if a U.S. regional recall
were expanded nationwide, he would expect automakers to take similar
action in Japan.
Takata, automakers and regulators are still trying to find out
what's causing the air bag ruptures related to the regional recall.
Extending that nationwide would add more than 8 million vehicles to
the mix, Takata has said.
(Reporting by Mari Saito and Chang-Ran Kim; Editing by Ian
Geoghegan)
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