BURIRAM, Thailand (ANN/THE YOMIURI SHIMBUN) — Toyota Motor Corp stopped shipments of six vehicle models to five Southeast Asian countries, due to its subsidiary, Daihatsu Motor Co’s safety scandal.
An investigation found Daihatsu did not properly test its vehicles for collision safety. Daihatsu has suspended all shipments and halted operations at its Japan plants.
The six models are Toyota-brand vehicles that Daihatsu was involved in developing.
Toyota said talks are underway with the authorities in each country on when to resume shipments. The cars are currently not being sent to Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam or Cambodia.
Toyota suspended shipments of Veloz and Avanza compact cars and four other models from Wednesday, when a third party reported finding numerous instances of misconduct by Daihatsu over an extended period of time. Toyota has also reported details about the fraud to authorities in each country.
The certification system for vehicles differs in each country. In Thailand, Toyota will have the Veloz recertified based on the instructions of the Thai authorities.
The affected shipments make up about 5 per cent of Toyota’s production in Asia and are not expected to have a great impact.
“We want to fully resume shipments next year,” Masahiko Maeda, Toyota’s Asia region chief executive officer, told reporters in Thailand on Saturday.
Daihatsu conducts business overseas through joint ventures with local companies, among other means, and has four plants in Malaysia and Indonesia. Daihatsu, which produced about 860,000 units overseas in fiscal 2022, supplies some of its vehicles to Toyota.
In Malaysia, Daihatsu has a 20 per cent stake in local manufacturer Perodua Manufacturing Sdn Bhd, which had the top share of sales volume, at 40 per cent, in 2022. Although shipments have been suspended, production has continued.