The safety crisis plaguing the global automotive industry deepened as Japans three biggest carmakers said they would recall more than 11 million additional vehicles because of faulty air bags that can shoot shrapnel at motorists.
The safety crisis involving faulty air bags that shoot shrapnel deepened after Toyota and Nissan added more than 6 million vehicles to their global recalls, with Honda planning to expand a call back.
CEOs ranked these 10 states as the best in the U.S. for business, according to Chief Executive magazines 2015 "Best and Worst States for Business" survey.
Nissan Motor Co. plans to expand a regional U.S. recall of cars with potentially defective Takata Corp. air bags after a woman said she was injured last month by shrapnel from the device in her 2006 Sentra sedan.
U.S. regulators are looking into whether a recall last year by Nissan Motor Co., Japans second-largest automaker, failed to fix a flaw in the air-bag control systems on almost 1 million vehicles.