
Japanese carmaker Honda has said it is expanding a global recall of cars over concerns of faulty airbags that have been linked to at least one fatality and several injuries.
The recall by Japan's second largest carmaker comes as Honda rival Toyota battles to contain the fallout from a series of safety recalls affecting more than 8 million vehicles.
The latest expansion of Honda's airbag recall includes 378,000 cars in the US and 41,000 in Canada announced on Tuesday.
On Wednesday the company added another 17,000 cars in Japan, Australia and elsewhere in Asia, taking the number of affected cars to more than 430,000.
In a statement the carmaker said the potentially defective air bag inflators could rupture, "resulting in metal fragments passing through the airbag cushion material and possibly causing injury or fatality to vehicle occupants".
Fatality
The company said it had been alerted to 12 incidents involving the defect, including one fatality, but added that there had been no new reports since last year.
The expanded recall covers models made in 2001 and 2002 of the Honda Accord, Civic, TL, CR-V, Odyssey, Pilot and CL in North America and the Inspire, Saber and Lagreat models sold in Japan.
"We have concluded that we cannot be completely certain that the driver's airbag inflator in the vehicles being added to the recall at this time will perform as designed," Honda said.
The company has said it will replace the driver's side airbag inflator on the cars.
Honda's latest recall is the third the company has made over the airbag problem since it first went public on the matter in November 2008.
The company's announcement comes at a time of increased attention on vehicle recalls - particularly those affecting Japanese carmakers.
On Tuesday, Toyota said it would recall more than 440,000 of the 2010 model of its flagship Prius and other hybrid cars due to a braking glitch.
The recall by Japan's second largest carmaker comes as Honda rival Toyota battles to contain the fallout from a series of safety recalls affecting more than 8 million vehicles.
The latest expansion of Honda's airbag recall includes 378,000 cars in the US and 41,000 in Canada announced on Tuesday.
On Wednesday the company added another 17,000 cars in Japan, Australia and elsewhere in Asia, taking the number of affected cars to more than 430,000.
In a statement the carmaker said the potentially defective air bag inflators could rupture, "resulting in metal fragments passing through the airbag cushion material and possibly causing injury or fatality to vehicle occupants".
Fatality
The company said it had been alerted to 12 incidents involving the defect, including one fatality, but added that there had been no new reports since last year.
The expanded recall covers models made in 2001 and 2002 of the Honda Accord, Civic, TL, CR-V, Odyssey, Pilot and CL in North America and the Inspire, Saber and Lagreat models sold in Japan.
"We have concluded that we cannot be completely certain that the driver's airbag inflator in the vehicles being added to the recall at this time will perform as designed," Honda said.
The company has said it will replace the driver's side airbag inflator on the cars.
Honda's latest recall is the third the company has made over the airbag problem since it first went public on the matter in November 2008.
The company's announcement comes at a time of increased attention on vehicle recalls - particularly those affecting Japanese carmakers.
On Tuesday, Toyota said it would recall more than 440,000 of the 2010 model of its flagship Prius and other hybrid cars due to a braking glitch.