Canadian Manufacturing

Officials raid Mitsubishi plant over manipulated fuel mileage data

by The Associated Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Environment Manufacturing Operations Regulation Automotive Public Sector Transportation


Japan's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism investigating at automaker's assembly plant in central Nagoya

PHOTO: Mitsubishi

Mitsubishi apologized April 20 for what it said was intentional falsification of mileage test data by employees. PHOTO: Mitsubishi

TOKYO—Officials are investigating after Mitsubishi Motors Corp. after the company said it had found employees manipulated fuel efficiency data of more than 620,000 light vehicles it manufactured.

Local media reports showed investigators from the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism entering offices of the company’s assembly plant in central Japan’s Nagoya on April 21.

A day earlier, the company apologized for what it said was intentional falsification of mileage test data that falsely boosted fuel economy by about 5 per cent to 10 per cent.

Trading in Mitsubishi Motors’ shares was halted before the close after the shares fell more than 20 per cent.

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Mitsubishi Motors was tarnished by a massive recall coverup of safety defects 15 years ago.

The inaccurate tests by the Tokyo-based automaker involved so-called “minicars” with tiny engines whose main attraction is generally great mileage. Mitsubishi was reporting mileage of up to 30.4 kilometres per litre (71.5 miles per gallon).

The inaccurate tests by the Tokyo-based automaker involved 157,000 of its own-brand eK wagon and eK Space light passenger cars, and 468,000 Dayz and Dayz Roox vehicles produced for Nissan Motor Co.

All are so-called “minicars” with tiny engines whose main attraction is generally great mileage. They were produced from March 2013.

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