Vehicle Company, Volvo Cars, which is owned by China's Zhejiang Geely Holding, is
voluntarily recalling about 200,000 cars after it found an engineering
issue that could potentially cause fuel leakage in the engine
compartment over time.
The group said its probe had
identified that some vehicles may have
small cracks inside one of the fuel lines in the engine compartment,
which along with a pressurised fuel system may over time lead to fuel
leakage in the engine compartment.
About 219,000 cars of 11 different models produced in 2015 and 2016
had been affected, the Swedish company said, with the highest number of
impacted cars in Sweden, the UK and Germany. The Swedish recall was
first reported by daily Aftonbladet.
Volvo sold 503,127 cars in 2015 and 534,332 cars in 2016.
"There are no reports alleging injuries or damages related to this
issue. Volvo preventatively recalls the cars to avert any possible
future problems," Volvo said in its statement.
The company's fortunes have been revived since Geely bought it in
2010 and its popular new premium models now compete with larger rivals
Daimler and Volkswagen. It sold a record 642,253 cars in 2018.
However, a prolonged US-China trade war has inflated raw materials
costs and resulted in a slowdown in Chinese demand for cars. That has
forced Volvo to spend to retool its global factories to limit the
negative tariff impact and led it to postpone its plans to go public
indefinitely.
Earlier in January, Geely Automobile, the main listed unit of the
Geely empire, which owns Volvo, forecast flat sales in 2019, as China's
most successful car maker struggles with slowing economic growth and
more cautious consumers.
A Volvo spokesperson declined to comment on Wednesday on the cost of the latest recall.
The company did its largest recall to date in 2004, when it called
back 460,000 cars to fix wiring in an electronic control module for the
cars' main cooling fan.
- Reuters
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