1.1511364-2240915682
A man walks past a Honda on display at Honda Motor Co. headquarters in Tokyo. Honda Motor Co. recalled an additional 4.89 million vehicles around the world Thursday, May 14, 2015, for a new type of problem in Takata air bag inflators, for which Japanese rivals Toyota and Nissan have already carried out recalls. Image Credit: AP

Tokyo: Honda Motor Co could see an impact on sales in Japan from its plans to recall some 5 million cars to replace potentially fatal air bags made by Japan’s Takata Corp, a top executive said on Friday.

Senior Managing Officer Sho Minekawa, who oversees Honda’s domestic sales operations, told reporters the recall announced a day earlier was a precautionary measure and investigations into the cause of the problem were still ongoing.

“There may be some impact (on sales in Japan) but we want to make sure we take the right steps,” Minekawa said at the launch of Honda’s new Shuttle hybrid model.

Honda’s move follows a recall announced this week by rivals Toyota Motor Corp and Nissan Motor Co of some 6.5 million vehicles.

It also comes after investigations showed that some Takata air bag inflators were not sealed properly, allowing moisture to seep into the propellant casing, that could make the air bag explode with excessive force.

Some 36 million vehicles globally have been recalled since 2008 for issues linked to Takata air bags, at the centre of one of the world’s biggest auto safety crises.

Deaths

The tally could rise after Japan’s transport minister said the government would ask other automakers to consider recalls of

cars equipped with Takata’s inflators made during the same time period as the cars covered by the latest recall. The automakers and Takata have not disclosed the time period.

Six deaths have been linked to the defective air bags, all on cars made by Honda, which has borne the brunt of the Takata recalls to date, and which posted disappointing profit forecasts last month citing high quality-related costs.

Minekawa said Honda would negotiate how to share the burden of the costs with Takata only after the cause of the problem is identified and linked back to the supplier.

Takata, in turn, has said it had no immediate plans to set aside more reserves for the fresh recalls — totalling more than 11 million vehicles — since a defect had not been officially identified.

Takata shares, which fell more than 7 per cent early on Friday, were trading down 3 per cent at 0548 GMT.