Toyota kept its title as the world's biggest automaker
after posting global sales of 10.15 million vehicles for 2015,
outpacing scandal-hit Volkswagen and US rival General Motors.
Struggling to move past a pollution-cheating scandal, Volkswagen
earlier said it logged sales of 9.93 million vehicles worldwide last
year, while Chevrolet and Cadillac maker GM moved 9.8 million.
In
the first half of the year, the German giant was in pole position,
outpacing Toyota as it rode momentum in emerging economies.
But
then it posted its first drop in annual sales for more than a decade, as
it was hammered by a massive pollution cheating scandal.
Volkswagen
sank into its biggest crisis over stunning revelations in September
that it had fitted 11 million of its vehicles with devices designed to
dodge pollution tests.
The US government has said it was suing VW for $20 billion in civil penalties over the scandal.
Toyota
broke GM's decades-long reign as the world's top automaker in 2008 but
lost it three years later to the US firm, as Japan's earthquake-tsunami
disaster dented production and disrupted the supply chains.
However,
in 2012 it once again overtook its Detroit rival and has remained on
top since, despite slowing sales in its home market where a weak economy
has taken a bite out of demand.
Toyota's overall sales -- which include its Daihatsu and Hino brands -- edged down 0.8 percent from a year ago.
Rival Nissan said Wednesday its global sales hit a calendar-year record 5.42 million units, up 2.1 percent from 2014.
Toyota's
upbeat announcement comes despite the firm struggling to recover its
reputation for safety after the recall of millions of cars around the
world for various problems, including an exploding air bag crisis at
supplier Takata.
At least 10 deaths globally and scores of
injuries have been linked to the faulty airbags fitted in cars made by
some of the world's leading auto giants.
Toyota, maker of the
Camry sedan and Prius hybrid, had stopped building new plants for
several years, and turned its focus to quality rather than sales volume.
The
company is also overhauling its production methods, vowing to slash
development costs to try to offset any downturn in the market and
squeeze more productivity out of existing plants.
Toyota is pushing further into the fast-growing market for
environmentally friendly cars, especially in China where officials are
struggling to contain an air pollution crisis.
It has also released its first mass-market hydrogen fuel-cell car, the Mirai, in a bid to tap the green market.
Volkswagen's
new chief executive, meanwhile, has said his firm was abandoning its
ambition to become the world's biggest carmaker.
"For me, this
obsession with unit sales and the ambition to constantly reach new
records makes no sense," Matthias Mueller told the weekly
WirtschaftsWoche in an interview published in December.
"I'm not going declare sheer size as an end in itself."
His predecessor Martin Winterkorn had focused on VW overtaking Toyota as the world's biggest carmaker by 2018.
Source: Timeslive
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