Accused: Nissan to take S Korea to court over emissions claims

Though the company paid fine, it also filed appeal against Ministry of Environment


Afp June 28, 2016 1 min read
Though the company paid fine, it also filed appeal against Ministry of Environment. PHOTO: REUTERS

TOKYO: The Japanese automaker Nissan said on Monday it is taking South Korea to court in response to Seoul’s claim that it manipulated emissions data on a popular sports utility vehicle.

Nissan noted that it had invested heavily in green car technology; particularly in electrical vehicles and would continue to ‘strongly deny’ South Korea’s claims.

Nissan paid a 330 million won ($280,000) fine ordered by South Korea’s environment ministry but said it was going to court to try to get the decision overturned.

“Although we paid the fine ordered by the MOE (Ministry of Environment), we have filed an administrative appeal against the MOE’s actions,” Nissan said.

In May, South Korea said it would fine Nissan and later called on state prosecutors to probe its local unit after saying tests had shown an emission defeat system on the ‘Qashqai model’ that made it appear to be less polluting than it really was.



The decision follows an investigation that began last December after German carmaker Volkswagen admitted having installed devices aimed at cheating emissions tests in 11 million diesel engines.

The ministry also banned the sale of the vehicle in South Korea.

In April, another Japanese giant Mitsubishi Motors admitted it had been falsifying fuel-economy tests for years, manipulating data to make cars seem more efficient than they were in reality.

Last month, Nissan threw a lifeline to Mitsubishi Motors, saying it would invest about $2.2 billion in the company to become its top shareholder.

It was Nissan that first uncovered the problems with Mitsubishi’s fuel economy data, but Mitsubishi said Nissan had no part in the cheating.

Mitsubishi produced two affected models for Nissan.

Meanwhile, small-car maker Suzuki has been hit by its shock admission that it used improper fuel-testing methods for years, affecting millions of cars.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 28th, 2016.

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