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						 Mitsubishi 
						Motors admits manipulating fuel economy data, shares 
						tumble 
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		[April 20, 2016] 
		By Naomi Tajitsu 
		TOKYO (Reuters) - Mitsubishi Motors Corp 
		admitted to manipulating test data to overstate the fuel economy of 
		625,000 cars sold in Japan, knocking its shares down more than 15 
		percent and wiping $1.2 billion off its market value on Wednesday. | 
			
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			 The automaker said it stopped making and selling its eK mini-wagons 
			for the domestic market after Nissan Motor, which markets a similar 
			model made by Mitsubishi, found a discrepancy in fuel efficiency 
			test data. 
 Mitsubishi Motors said the fuel economy levels of models made for 
			the local market were up to a tenth lower than stated in its test 
			results. It said it manipulated those levels to gain a favorable 
			reading for its fuel economy certification.
 
 As global emissions regulations tighten, fuel economy has become a 
			major factor for environmental- and cost-conscious buyers.
 
 Tetsuro Aikawa, the president of Japan's sixth-largest automaker, 
			bowed in apology at a news conference in Tokyo for what is the 
			biggest scandal at Mitsubishi Motors since a damaging defect 
			cover-up over a decade ago.
 
			
			 
			"We'd like to apologize for the issue," Aikawa said. "The focus 
			right now is to resolve this problem and prevent it from happening 
			again ... it could be quite damaging."
 Shares in Mitsubishi Motors closed down more than 15 percent at 733 
			yen, the stock's biggest one-day drop in almost 12 years. Shares in 
			Nissan closed down 1 percent.
 
 Mitsubishi Motors said the test manipulation involved 625,000 
			vehicles produced since mid-2013. These include its eK mini-wagon as 
			well as 468,000 cars it made for Nissan, which markets them as the 
			Dayz.
 
 MINISTRY ORDERS REPORT
 
 Nissan, which has sold 450,000 of its Mitsubishi-made Dayz since 
			2013, said the manufacturer admitted intentionally falsifying the 
			data. It said it had no plans to change its relationship with 
			Mitsubishi Motors for now, and would not comment on how the issue 
			might impact the development of updated models.
 
 Mitsubishi said it would examine other models made for global 
			markets to verify their fuel economy levels.
 
 The company said that in calculating its cars' fuel efficiency, it 
			measured how much they slowed per second rather than the time it 
			takes to slow by 10 kms (6.2 miles) per hour, as required under 
			Japanese regulations. It also manipulated the equipment used to 
			measure a car's rolling resistance during fuel economy tests, and 
			used a different testing system from other Japanese automakers.
 
			
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			Japan's Transport Ministry ordered Mitsubishi Motors to submit a 
			full report on the test manipulation within a week, and said it 
			would decide on its response to that report by May 18. 
			"We are disappointed this has occurred and regret that an incident 
			like this can also happen in Japan," said Takao Onoda, director at 
			the ministry's recall division.
 Mitsubishi Motors' admission follows its revelation in 2000 that it 
			covered up safety records and customer complaints. Four years later 
			it admitted to broader problems going back decades. It was Japan's 
			worst automotive recall scandal at the time.
 
 Mitsubishi Motors, which has annual sales of just over 1 million 
			cars, is the first Japanese automaker to report misconduct involving 
			fuel economy tests since Volkswagen <VOWG_p.DE> was discovered last 
			year to have cheated diesel emissions tests in the United States and 
			elsewhere.
 
 South Korean car makers Hyundai Motor Co <005380.KS> and affiliate 
			Kia Motors Corp <000270.KS> in 2014 agreed to pay $350 million in 
			penalties to the U.S. government for overstating their vehicles' 
			fuel economy ratings. They also resolved claims from car owners.
 
 ($1 = 108.8600 yen)
 
 (Reporting by Naomi Tajitsu; Editing by Chang-Ran Kim and Ian 
			Geoghegan)
 
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