Chrysler rejected Tuesday a US safety agency’s request to recall up to 2.7 million Jeep sport utility vehicles to fix a risk of engine fires that have left dozens dead.
The US automaker said it had received a letter from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration requesting it to recall Jeep Grand Cherokees in model years 1993-2004 and the Jeep Liberty from model years 2002-2007.
“The company does not agree with NHTSA’s conclusions and does not intend to recall the vehicles cited in the investigation. The subject vehicles are safe and are not defective,” Chrysler said in a statement.
In its letter to Chrysler dated June 3, the NHTSA said an investigation begun a year ago came to a “tentative” conclusion that the placement of the fuel tank behind the rear axle in the SUVs raises safety risks.
“This investigation revealed numerous fire-related deaths and injuries, fires that did not result in deaths and fuel leaks in rear impacts,” the agency said.
The NHTSA said fatal rear-impact fires caused the death of 44 people in the Cherokee and seven in the Liberty.
Chrysler insisted the agency’s conclusions were “based on an incomplete analysis of the underlying data.”
“All of us remain committed to continue working with NHTSA to provide information confirming the safety of these vehicles,” Sergio Marchionne, chairman and chief executive of Chrysler, said in the statement.
The NHTSA’s recommendation “does not constitute a formal finding or conclusion” that the vehicles have a safety-related defect, it said.
The NHTSA did not immediately comment Tuesday on Chrysler’s refusal to recall the cars. But the automaker ist required to provide the agency with a full explanation of its decision.
If the two sides still disagree on the issue, the NHTSA can hold a public hearing and, if it concludes that a safety-related defect does exist, it can order a recall.
Marchionne is also CEO of Fiat, which has majority control of the third-largest US automaker after it emerged from a US government-backed bankruptcy reorganization in 2009.
Chrysler rejects Jeep recall for alleged fire risk