'Shocked' Mitsubishi Electric CEO to quit over data deceit
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[July 02, 2021] By
Tim Kelly
TOKYO (Reuters) -Mitsubishi Electric's CEO said he will step down to
take responsibility for "three decades of systematic deceit" during
which the Japanese firm falsified inspection data for air conditioners
and brake compressors used in trains.
The admission by Mitsubishi, whose products range from air conditioners
and vacuum cleaners to industrial printers and satellites, further dents
Japan's reputation for high-quality manufacturing, already tarnished by
other cases of companies falsifying or covering up test data.
"I am shocked by this," Takeshi Sugiyama told a news conference, at
which he apologised for the falsification and promised to appoint a
successor as early as this month once he had helped coordinate the
company's response to the problem.
Sugiyama, who became CEO in 2018 and has been with Mitsubishi for more
than four decades, said on Friday he regretted not informing
shareholders at its annual meeting on June 29.
Mitsubishi management was aware of the air conditioner data problem two
weeks before and knew about the air compressor falsifications the day
before shareholders met, but chose not to release the information until
June 30, he said.
The latest corporate scandal comes amid heightened concern over
corporate governance in Japan after an investigation found managers at
Toshiba Corp, another well-established conglomerates, had colluded with
the trade ministry to pressure foreign shareholders.
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A logo of Mitsubishi Electric Corp is
pictured at the CEATEC JAPAN 2017 (Combined Exhibition of Advanced
Technologies) at the Makuhari Messe in Chiba, Japan, October 2,
2017. REUTERS/Toru Hanai/Files
Japan's economy and trade minister, Hiroshi Kajiyama, said earlier that the
government would act if it found that Mitsubishi had broken any laws or
regulations.
Mitsubishi said the equipment supplied with falsified inspection data posed no
safety risk, and although it breached contracts with customers, did not break
any laws.
The company said it would release a full report in September, alongside measures
to deal with the problem.
In the 35 years that Mitsubishi falsified inspection data, it supplied 84,600
air conditioning units to 80 rail companies.
It said it shipped 1,500 compressors, used in train brakes and doors, including
in Japan's high-speed bullet trains, to 20 mostly domestic companies.
(Reporting by Tim Kelly. Editing by Jane Merriman and Alexander Smith)
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