Nissan to pay $280,000 for emissions cheating

Employees work at the main assembly line of V6 engine at the Nissan Iwaki Plant in Iwaki city, Fukushima prefecture, Japan, April 5, 2016. REUTERS/Yuya Shino/File Photo         GLOBAL BUSINESS WEEK AHEAD PACKAGE - SEARCH 'BUSINESS WEEK AHEAD MAY 16'  FOR ALL IMAGES

 

Seoul / AFP

South Korea said on Monday it will fine Nissan for manipulating emissions data on a popular diesel sports utility vehicle, bringing the Japanese car giant into a widening global scandal that has already ensnared Volkswagen and Mitsubishi.
Seoul said it would order recalls of hundreds of Qashqai model SUVs after tests revealed an emission defeat system that made the vehicle appear to be less polluting than it really was.
The decision follows an investigation into 20 diesel-powered cars last December, initiated by Seoul after German carmaker Volkswagen admitted to having installed devices aimed at cheating emissions tests into 11 million diesel engines.
Nissan would be fined 330 million won ($280,000), the environment ministry said on Monday.
“Our investigation… concluded that Nissan illegally manipulated emission data,” the ministry said in a statement.
Hong Dong-Kon, a ministry official handling transport-related regulations, added: “A group of auto industry experts we consulted with also agreed that this is a clear manipulation of emission data.”
State tests showed the Qashqai switched off its emission reduction device when the car temperature reached 35 degrees Celsius to
stop the vehicle from overheating, whereas other cars waited until the temperature reached 50
degrees.
The ministry also said that when the Qashqai’s emissions reduction device stopped working, the level of emissions was about the same or higher than the Volkswagen’s cars equipped with emissions-cheating software systems.
Unlike its rivals Volkswagen and Mitsubishi, Nissan — Japan’s number two automaker — has so far avoided being embroiled in
any emissions or fuel economy cheating scandals.
Mitsubishi last month admitted it had been falsifying fuel-economy tests for years, manipulating data to make cars seem more efficient than they were in reality.
The scandal includes mini-cars produced by Mitsubishi for Nissan as part of a joint venture, but Nissan is said to have had no part in the cheating.
Nissan threw a surprise lifeline to Mitsubishi last week by offering to buy 34 percent of its shares, but its top executive warned on Friday that he would kill the $2.2 billion offer if the Mitsubishi scandal spreads beyond Japan.
Nissan will be given 10 days to present its opinions on the Qashqai issue before Seoul officially carries out punitive measures, the environment ministry said.

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