Skip navigation
Newswire

Japan carmakers off hook in landmark pollution suit

TOKYO, Oct 29 (Reuters) - A Japanese court on Tuesday ordered the central and Tokyo city governments to pay compensation for health problems caused by diesel exhaust fumes but rejected a demand that vehicle makers be made to pay as well.

It was the first time that Japanese automakers had been taken to court in a suit over health problems related to pollution.

The Tokyo District Court ruled that the national government, Tokyo city government and a public highway corporation owed 99 plaintiffs a total of 79.2 million yen ($642,600) for contributing to their health problems.

The plaintiffs, who suffer from pollution-related diseases such as asthma, had sought a combined 2.23 billion yen ($18 million) in compensation and an injunction against emission of pollutants. The injunction was also rejected by the court.

"The claim against the automakers was rejected," said a court spokesman. "But the claims against the government were upheld."

The suit named seven auto makers, including Toyota Motor Corp, Nissan Motor Co, Nissan Diesel Motor Co, Mitsubishi Motors Corp, Hino Motors Ltd, Isuzu Motors Ltd and Mazda Motor Corp.

The suit claimed that the plaintiffs had been made sick by vehicle exhaust, and diesel exhaust particles in particular, from 104 roads and expressways in the Tokyo metropolitan area.

The suit said that profits had motivated the car makers to continue producing vehicles that emitted harmful exhaust fumes and to expand the market of diesel-powered vehicles.

The automakers argued that they had tried their best to develop technologies to reduce exhaust gas and said the spread of diesel-powered vehicles was recognised as being market driven.

They also claimed that the concentration of automobiles in Tokyo causing air pollution must be understood as part of larger urban problems that cannot be controlled by the industry.

The results of the suit, filed in 1996, are likely to give new impetus to efforts by populist Tokyo governor Shintaro Ishihara to clamp down on diesel vehicles in Tokyo, a car-choked city of more than 12 million people in a region of more than 30 million.