U.S. rejects Ford petition to delay recall of three
million vehicles
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[November 18, 2017]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration said on Friday it was rejecting a
petition by Ford Motor Co <F.N> to delay recalling about 3 million
vehicles with potentially defective air bag inflators to conduct
additional testing.
The agency said it did not find the request by the second largest U.S.
automaker "reasonable under the circumstances or supported by the
testing and data it has collected to date."
Takata inflators can explode with excessive force, unleashing metal
shrapnel inside cars and trucks. At least 18 deaths and 180 injuries
worldwide have been tied to the defect that led Takata Corp <TKTDQ.PK>
to file for bankruptcy protection in June and prompted at least 19
automakers to issue recalls.
NHTSA also rejected a similar petition filed by Mazda Motor Co <7261.T>
covering about 6,000 vehicles. Mazda said in a statement it "takes our
customers' safety as a single-minded top priority and continues to work
hand-in-hand with NHTSA."
The public can comment on NHTSA's decision until Dec. 18 on both Ford
and Mazda's petitions. Mazda said it would "provide further information
once NHTSA issues its final determination."
Ford did not immediately say if it planned to challenge the agency's
decision. "We will cooperate with the agency, as we always do,"
spokeswoman Elizabeth Weigandt said in an email. The vehicles in
question include the 2007-11 Ford Ranger, 2006-12 Fusion and Lincoln
MKZ, 2006-11 Mercury Milan, and 2007-10 Ford Edge and Lincoln MKX.
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The logo of Ford is seen during the 87th International Motor Show at
Palexpo in Geneva, Switzerland March 8, 2017. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
In July, NHTSA said new testing prompted Takata to declare inflators defective
in Ford, Nissan Motor Co <7201.T> and Mazda vehicles in some driver-side air
bags. Nissan agreed to a recall of 515,000 vehicles.
NHTSA agreed in 2016 to a request by General Motors Co <GM.N> to delay a recall
of 2.5 million vehicles with Takata air bag inflators as the Detroit automaker
conducts additional testing to determine if the vehicles need replacement
inflators.
Separately, a report issued on Friday by an independent monitor of the Takata
recalls said more than 10 million U.S. vehicles and 18.5 million faulty Takata
air bag inflators remain unrepaired in the largest ever auto recall.
Takata has said it expects to have recalled 125 million vehicles worldwide by
2019.
The report said 43.1 million Takata airbag inflators were under recall in 31.5
million vehicles today, with scheduled expansion to about 65 million inflators
by the end of 2018. Of those, 24.6 million inflators in 20 million vehicles have
been repaired.
In 2019, another 4.1 million vehicles will be recalled to replace interim
inflators.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Richard Chang)
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