Toyota acknowledges more certification cheating and apologises
The Japanese car giant said it failed to carry out proper certification on seven models.
Toyota has reported more cases of cheating on certification tests for new models required by the Japanese government, on top of those acknowledged earlier.
The Japanese car giant said it failed to carry out proper certification on seven models, including the Camry sedan and RAV 4 sport utility vehicle.
The false tests included pedestrian protection, side collisions and steering impact.
No safety problems were associated with the misconduct and people who own Toyota vehicles do not need to take any action, according to Toyota. Toyota’s overseas production was not affected.
Toyota chairman Akio Toyoda apologised in June while announcing massive testing irregularities involving six models, including the Crown and the Lexus RX luxury models.
Production of some models in Japan was halted.
“It is with deep regret that we were not able to properly conduct our certification operations, and we apologise to our stakeholders for any concern or inconvenience this may have caused them,” Toyota said.
Toyota said workers did not clearly understand the rules for preparing documents required for certification applications or the basic importance of such work.
Managers also lacked that understanding and were not adequately involved.
The company was carrying out an internal investigation after the earlier mishap, trying to correct the problem, when the latest oversight surfaced.
The wide-ranging fraudulent testing, which surfaced earlier at the firm, involved the use of inadequate or outdated data in collision tests and incorrect testing of airbag inflation and rear-seat damage in crashes.
Engine power tests also were falsified. The deceptive test results were also found on discontinued models.
Similar fraudulent tests were found at Mazda and Honda, and at Toyota group makers Hino Motors and Daihatsu.
Toyota reported the latest findings to the government and renewed its promise to correct its corporate culture and its work habits.
Production of the Corolla Fielder, Corolla Axio and Yaris Cross, all small models for the Japanese market, has been suspended since June 3.
It is scheduled to resume in September once the transport ministry confirms they comply with standards.