Japan’s IHI admits to lapse in aircraft engine inspection

Bloomberg

Japanese heavy-machinery maker IHI Corp said employees didn’t properly check so-me aircraft engines, the latest quality-control issue to dent the reputation of the country’s manufacturing sector.
Shares of IHI, which makes engine components found on Airbus SE and Boeing Co. jets, dropped as much as 5.2 percent after the company confirmed Japan’s Transport Ministry had inspected its aircraft-engine business and determined there had been inappropriate checks.
IHI is still investigating how many engines were involved and over what period, said an IHI spokeswoman. The probe is centered on IHI’s Mizuho plant in Western Tokyo, which services the V2500, CF34 and PW1100G engines, the spokeswoman said.
According to IHI’s website, the V2500 has been installed on Airbus A319, A320, A321 jets, while PW1100G powers the Airbus A320 neo. Kyodo reported that IHI told ANA Holdings and Japan Airlines Co. there were no safety issues on parts serviced by IHI.
IHI’s disclosure follows failings at other domestic manufacturers. Nissan Motor and Subaru acknowledged faulty vehicle inspections, while Kobe Steel Ltd. admitted to falsifying product quality.
“This news is likely to raise a number of red flags on corporate governance,” Citigroup analyst Graeme McDonald wrote in a note on Tuesday. “Perhaps this is one of the knock-on effects of a growing labor shortage in Japan, but it could make observers wonder whether the importance of inspection and product quality has slipped down
the agenda.”

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