Nissan recalls 1.2 million Japan vehicles for re-inspections

The problem does not affect Nissan vehicles sold outside Japan

October 02, 2017 04:34 pm | Updated 09:52 pm IST - TOKYO

A logo of Nissan is pictured outside the company headquarters building in Yokohama, south of Tokyo February 25, 2011. Renault and Nissan will review the capital structure of their alliance, Carlos Ghosn, Chairman and CEO of Renault-Nissan Alliance said, amid calls from investors for the French carmaker to free up capital tied up in its Japanese partner.  REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao (JAPAN - Tags: BUSINESS TRANSPORT)

A logo of Nissan is pictured outside the company headquarters building in Yokohama, south of Tokyo February 25, 2011. Renault and Nissan will review the capital structure of their alliance, Carlos Ghosn, Chairman and CEO of Renault-Nissan Alliance said, amid calls from investors for the French carmaker to free up capital tied up in its Japanese partner. REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao (JAPAN - Tags: BUSINESS TRANSPORT)

Nissan is recalling 1.2 million vehicles in Japan that were produced between October 2014 and September this year to re-inspect them as they had not gone through the proper final checks.

Japanese automaker Nissan Motor Co. said Monday a team, including an independent third party, was investigating the cause of the oversight and promised to prevent a recurrence. The problem does not affect Nissan vehicles sold outside Japan.

The failure is not believed to have affected vehicle safety as they were final-stage checks, according to the Yokohama-based maker of the March subcompact, Leaf electric car and Infiniti luxury models.

Nissan Chief Executive Hiroto Saikawa told reporters the oversight occurred at all six Nissan plants in Japan. He acknowledged not enough had been done to ensure inspection staff were aware of inspection requirements.

The inspection oversight is an embarrassment for Nissan. Nissan temporarily stopped registering new vehicles in Japan last week, after the government notified the company it had noticed inspection irregularities.

Japan’s car industry has been hit by a series of scandals. Volkswagen AG of Germany acknowledged in 2015, it had equipped its diesel cars with illegal software that enabled cheating on U.S. emissions tests. Volkswagen has agreed to more than $20 billion in fines and civil settlements over the scandal.

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