Advertisement

Takata: Evidence doesn’t support U.S. air bag recall

WATCH: A congressional panel hears from airbag supplier Takata corporation Wednesday after the company refused to comply with federal demands to expand a recall of its defective airbags. Susan McGinnis reports on the Capital Hill showdown.

DETROIT – A defiant Takata Corp. told a U.S. safety agency that its demand for a nationwide air bag recall isn’t supported by evidence, and the government doesn’t have authority to tell a parts maker to do a recall.

The company laid out its position in a Tuesday letter to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration obtained by The Associated Press that rejected the agency’s demand for a recall.

The letter sets the stage for a confrontation at a House subcommittee hearing on the matter Wednesday morning.

Meanwhile, Honda Canada continues to monitor the situation, and is “not aware of any abnormal deployments due to a ruptured Takata inflator in Canada,” according to a spokesperson.

Story continues below advertisement

“The airbag inflators with manufacturing issues that have been identified and are believed to pose a potential risk in Canada have already been subject to recall,” said Honda Canada public relations supervisor Maki Inoue in an email to Global News.

In a statement, NHTSA called Takata’s response “disappointing” and said it will review the response to determine its next steps. A week ago, the agency threatened civil fines and legal action if Takata didn’t declare the driver’s air bag inflators defective and agree to the recall. It can impose fines of up to $35 million.

The inflators can explode with too much force, spewing shrapnel into the passenger compartment. At least five deaths and dozens of injuries have been linked to the problem worldwide.

In its letter, Takata told Frank Borris, director of NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigation, that the agency is basing its demand for a national recall on slim evidence.

A national recall would add 8 million vehicles to previous recalls, Takata said. Those have been limited to high-humidity areas in Florida, Hawaii, along the Gulf Coast and in some U.S. territories. Takata has maintained that prolonged exposure to airborne moisture can cause the inflator propellant to burn faster than designed, causing it to explode with too much force.

But NHTSA, in its letter demanding a national recall, pointed to inflator ruptures that injured drivers in California and North Carolina – both outside there recall zone.

Story continues below advertisement

Takata, however, told the agency that the California case involving a 2005 Honda Accord already is covered by a Honda service campaign, making a recall unnecessary. A 2007 Ford Mustang in the North Carolina case has not been examined by either Takata or NHTSA, the letter said. “Therefore, there is no way to ascertain what actually occurred during the incident, whether any inflator ruptured,” it said.

Takata also contends that NHTSA only has authority to seek recalls from auto manufacturers and makers of replacement parts, not original parts suppliers. NHTSA disagrees.

“It is Takata’s current view that the currently available, reliable information does not support a nationwide determination of a safety defect in all ‘vehicles equipped with the subject driver-side inflators,”‘ the company’s head of product safety wrote in the letter.

A Takata quality executive and David Friedman, deputy NHTSA administrator, are scheduled to appear at Wednesday’s hearing before a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee.

NHTSA said in a statement Tuesday night Takata shares responsibility for keeping driver’s safe. “We believe anything short of a national recall does not live up to that responsibility,” the statement said.

With files from Global News

AP reporter Kageyama reported from Tokyo.

Sponsored content

AdChoices