Toyota unit falsified emissions data from at least 2003, probe finds
						
		 
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		 [August 02, 2022]  By 
		Satoshi Sugiyama 
		 
		TOKYO (Reuters) -A major affiliate of 
		Japan's Toyota Motor Corp falsified emissions data on some engines going 
		back to at least 2003, more than a decade earlier than previously 
		indicated, a company-commissioned probe showed on Tuesday.  
		 
		The investigative committee tasked by truck and bus maker Hino Motors 
		Ltd blamed the scandal on an environment where engineers did not feel 
		able to challenge superiors, in a rare criticism of corporate culture in 
		Japan.  
		 
		The committee, composed of lawyers and a corporate adviser, was set up 
		by Hino this year after it admitted to falsifying data related to 
		emissions and fuel performance of four engines. Its findings, released 
		on Tuesday, detail an inflexible atmosphere where it was difficult for 
		staff to feel "psychological safety", the committee said in a report. 
		 
		A sense of past success on the part of management helped engender the 
		culture, said committee chairperson Kazuo Sakakibara, who was the former 
		head prosecutor at the Osaka District Public Prosecutors Office. 
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		"The magnitude of their past successes has made them unable to change or 
		look at themselves objectively, and they have been unaware of changes in 
		the external environment and values," he told a briefing. 
		 
		"The organisation has become an ill-organized one where people are 
		unable to say what they cannot do." 
		 
		Hino's president, Satoshi Ogiso, apologised to reporters and said 
		management took its responsibilities seriously. He said he had received 
		a message from Toyota's president, Akio Toyoda, who said the misconduct 
		at Hino betrayed the trust of all stakeholders. 
		 
		Hino said it would come up with a new corporate governance system within 
		three months. 
		 
		'SHOULD HAVE BEEN FOUND' 
		 
		The automaker said the committee had found evidence of falsification 
		stretching back to at least October 2003, as opposed to the previously 
		disclosed timeframe of around 2016. 
		 
		The transportation ministry, which revoked the truck maker's 
		certification of the affected engines in March, said it would conduct an 
		on-site investigation of the company. 
		 
		
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			Hino Motors Ltd displays its new Hybrid Profia, a diesel-hybrid 
			version of its large commercial truck model at its R&D Centre at 
			Hino in Tokyo, Japan July 17, 2018. REUTERS/Naomi Tajitsu/File Photo 
            
			  
Hino has recalled close to 47,000 vehicles made between April 2017 and March 
this year, and Hino said an additional 20,900 would be recalled. 
 
The committee did not find evidence that executives outside the powertrain unit 
were aware of the misconduct. 
 
The division requires high expertise, which hindered personnel changes and 
allowed misconduct to continue, committee member Makoto Shimamoto said.  
 
"Misconducts have been passed down within the unit, but there were no monitoring 
functions in other units, which is a major issue," he said. "Even if there was 
no personnel movement within the organization, these issues should have been 
found."  
 
Ogiso said the company had put quality, compliance and talent development on the 
backburner as it sought to expand its scale and volume starting around 2000. 
 
As a result, numerical targets, such as product development schedules and fuel 
efficiency, were prioritised over working according to proper processes, he 
said.  
 
Toyota owns 50.1% of Hino. Shares of Hino fell almost 10% on Tuesday. 
 
Hino has joined a string of Japanese automakers involved in improper emissions 
tests. 
 
In 2018, the government said Mazda Motor Corp, Suzuki Motor Corp and Yamaha 
Motor Co Ltd had improperly tested vehicles for fuel economy and emissions. 
 
Subaru Corp and Nissan Motor Co Ltd were under scrutiny for the same reason the 
year before. 
  
The accuracy of automakers' emissions data was thrown into doubt in 2015 when 
Germany's Volkswagen AG admitted it had installed secret software in hundreds of 
thousands of U.S. diesel cars to cheat emissions tests and that as many as 11 
million vehicles could have similar software worldwide. 
 
(Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama Additional reporting by Maki ShirakiEditing by 
Christopher Cushing, David Dolan and Mark Potter) 
				 
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