Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Traffic Death In N.L. Triggers Air Bag Investigations In U.S., Canada

The Canadian Press, 04 Aug, 2016 01:16 PM
    DETROIT — The death of a Canadian driver has sparked a new investigation into a potentially deadly airbag problem affecting vehicles on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border.
     
    Fatal airbag deployments in Canada are rare, but the July 8 fatality of a motorist in Newfoundland and Labrador marked the first time that a Canadian has been killed by an exploding airbag inflator, Transport Canada says.
     
    The ruptured inflator on the 2009 Hyundai Elantra sent metal fragments into the passenger cabin, killing the driver in what officials described as a low-speed collision. The reason the airbag ruptured remains unknown.
     
    Transport Canada and the RCMP are investigating the cause of the incident, as well as the manufacturer — ARC Automotive Inc. of Knoxville, Tenn., which is already under investigation by American authorities. Transport Canada said ARC is co-operating with investigators.
     
    Transport Canada said it is still determining what model vehicles may be affected by the new airbag problem. The agency's American counterpart is trying to determine the entire population of ARC inflators in the U.S., which it estimates at eight million in older vehicles made by General Motors, Fiat Chrysler, Hyundai and Kia.
     
    Transport Canada says the safety benefits of airbags, which rely on controlled explosions that rapidly fill airbags in order to protect people in crashes, continue to outweigh the risks.
     
    The death and investigations bring fresh urgency to a probe opened last year by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration after an Ohio woman was injured by an ARC inflator. The U.S. safety agency on Thursday upgraded its investigation to an engineering analysis, a step closer to a recall.
     
    In Canada, Transport Minister Marc Garneau could order a recall without having to wait for the company to do so.
     
    "Any decision to recall is based on careful, verified information. At this point, the department's investigation — which is still preliminary — is needed to understand the issue," said Garneau spokeswoman Delphine Denis.
     
    U.S. investigators began looking at ARC inflators in July of last year after getting reports that the Ohio woman was seriously hurt when her 2002 Chrysler Town & Country minivan crashed and the inflator ruptured. The agency said it also found another injury involving someone in a 2004 Kia Optima midsize car. In both cases, the inflators were made at ARC's factory in Knoxville, according to agency documents.
     
     
    In the probe, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration focused on inflators made from 2000 until September of 2004. The population includes about 2.6 million that were sold to General Motors.
     
    According to NHTSA, the Elantra in the Newfoundland crash had an ARC inflator that was made in China, but it's unknown whether any of the same inflators were used in vehicles sold in the U.S. ARC has confirmed that the Canadian Elantra inflator "was substantially the same design" as the one used in at least one other U.S. model, the 2004 Kia Optima.
     
    The administration said in a statement that it would direct the collection and testing of ARC inflators as it tries to determine what caused them to explode with too much force. The agency said it will focus on determining the entire population of ARC inflators in the U.S. and whether any inflators made in China were sold in the U.S.
     
    Although the results are similar, the ARC problem is different from one that resulted in the recall of 69 million inflators in the U.S. made by Takata Corp.
     
    Takata inflators have been blamed for at least 11 and as many as 14 deaths worldwide, as well as hundreds of injuries. Takata uses the explosive chemical ammonium nitrate to inflate airbags, but the chemical can degrade over time and burn too quickly, blowing apart metal inflator canisters.
     
    Canada's colder — and therefore less humid — climate for most of the year largely minimizes the risk of the chemical degrading and heating too quickly, requiring it to be replaced.
     
    ARC uses a small amount of ammonium nitrate to ignite another chemical that inflates airbags, and authorities say they are not looking at ammonium nitrate as the cause. They are looking into whether a manufacturing problem causes a vent to become blocked in the ARC inflators. With no place for the gas to escape, a metal inflator canister can be blown into pieces.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Annual Review Off For Mentally Ill B.C. Father Who Killed His Three Children

    The province's Criminal Justice Branch says Allan Schoenborn consented to delaying this Thursday's hearing while B.C. Crown lawyers seek to have him designated a "high-risk" accused, tightening his restrictions for confinement.

    Annual Review Off For Mentally Ill B.C. Father Who Killed His Three Children

    Ontario Man Pleads Guilty To Theft For Trying To Cheat Others Out $7-Million Win

    Ontario Man Pleads Guilty To Theft For Trying To Cheat Others Out $7-Million Win
    Ontario Provincial Police say they began investigating a suspicious group Lotto 6/49 win in 2013.

    Ontario Man Pleads Guilty To Theft For Trying To Cheat Others Out $7-Million Win

    Immigrants Detained In Ontario Corrections Facilities Remain On Hunger Strike

    Immigrants Detained In Ontario Corrections Facilities Remain On Hunger Strike
    Approximately 50 men at the Toronto East Detention Centre and Central East Correctional Centre in Lindsay began refusing food on July 11, but an advocacy group says several have since decided to resume eating.

    Immigrants Detained In Ontario Corrections Facilities Remain On Hunger Strike

    Alberta Court Overturns Sexual Assault Acquittal, Saying 'No does not mean Yes'

    Justice J.E. Topolniski of the Court of Queen's Bench says the trial judge was wrong in his interpretation of the law in the case of a 15-year-old girl who was sexually assaulted by a boy at her high school.

    Alberta Court Overturns Sexual Assault Acquittal, Saying 'No does not mean Yes'

    Canadian-Made Robot, Named Ludwig, Helping Assess Dementia At Retirement Home

    Canadian-Made Robot, Named Ludwig, Helping Assess Dementia At Retirement Home
    TORONTO — A retirement home in north Toronto is preparing to welcome an unusual resident: Ludwig, an artificially intelligent robot.

    Canadian-Made Robot, Named Ludwig, Helping Assess Dementia At Retirement Home

    Triathlete Strokes To Marathon, 105 Km Lengthwise Okanagan Lake Swim

    Triathlete Strokes To Marathon, 105 Km Lengthwise Okanagan Lake Swim
      Adam Ellenstein hopes the 105-kilometre swim across the length of the lake in just under 41 hours will establish a Guinness World Record for the fastest lengthwise swim of the lake.

    Triathlete Strokes To Marathon, 105 Km Lengthwise Okanagan Lake Swim