Posted by: Kenji Hall on August 30
For the second time in less than a week, Japanese authorities want answers about overheating laptop batteries. This time, it’s Apple Computer in the hot seat. The Ministry of Economic Trade and Industry (Japanese only) has ordered Apple to investigate how a faulty Sony lithium-ion battery might have caused an iBook G4 to overheat and catch fire in Osaka.
Apple says the owner of the iBook G4 suffered minor burns, and that there was only one incident reported. The company has until Sept. 5 to report back to the ministry with production details about the laptops as well as plans to prevent a recurrence, or it could face a fine of $2,500.
The ministry said on Aug. 24 that there were two cases of smoldering batteries in Dell laptops last year. Nobody was injured.
Sony has taken its fair share of lumps lately, too. Authorities are looking into whether more laptops from other manufacturers with Sony-made lithium-ion batteries were affected. The Dell and Apple recalls combined amount to 7.7 million Sony batteries. Sony says the damage to earnings is likely to be in the range of $170 million to $260 million, and investors, worried about the possibility of more recalls, have sent Sony’s shares down by more than 6% since the Dell recall first surfaced in the U.S. in early August.
BusinessWeek’s team of Asia reporters brings you the latest insights on business, politics, technology and culture from some of the world’s biggest and fastest-growing economies. Eye on Asia’s bloggers include Asia regional editor Bruce Einhorn, Tokyo reporters Kenji Hall and Ian Rowley, Korea bureau chief Moon Ihlwan, Asia News Editor and China Bureau Chief. Dexter Roberts, and Hong Kong-based Asia correspondent Frederik Balfour.