The recalls correspond with a similar, precautionary recall by Toyota last week after a recent "unusual deployment" of a passenger-side airbag at a scrap yard in Japan.
Honda, Takata's biggest customer, said today it would recall an estimated 400,000 vehicles globally, including about 177,000 in Japan across 11 models such as the Stream minivan, Fit/Jazz subcompact and Civic hybrid produced in 2003.
The rest include about 100,000 in Europe and 70,000 in Asia-Pacific, and none in the United States, Honda said.
A spokeswoman said Honda would need to set aside more reserves to pay for the latest recalls, as well as the voluntary expansion to the rest of the world of a region-specific recall that had been limited to certain hot and humid areas in the United States.
She said she could not disclose a specific figure.
Honda has now recalled about 13.4 million vehicles globally for Takata airbag inflators since 2008 -- about half of those to investigate what could be the root cause of the defects. U.S. regulators last month ordered Takata to move forward with a nationwide expansion of the regional recall, but Takata has refused, effectively putting the onus for voluntary recalls on the car makers.
The total industry figure for Takata-related airbag recalls since 2008 has now reached 19.8 million vehicles, according to Reuters estimates.
Honda said that if the cause is identified and Takata is at fault, it would negotiate a return of some or all of the recall costs from Takata.
The recalls were triggered by an unusual explosion of a Takata airbag inflator in a 2003-model Toyota Will Cypha at a scrapyard in central Japan last month. Toyota recalled 185,000 vehicles from 2003 that were equipped with the same type of inflator, made at Takata's Monclova factory in Mexico.
Nissan, Mitsubishi
Nissan estimated its global recall would cover 152,000 cars, including 82,000 in Japan, 49,000 in Europe and 6,000 in China for 2003 and 2004 model-year vehicles. Mitsubishi will recall 304 Lancer sedans in Japan only.
A total of about 3.05 million vehicles have now been recalled in Japan by a dozen automakers.
Nissan separately recalled 250,000 Note, March and Latio cars in Japan to fix faulty side-view mirrors.
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