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Takata recall expected to climb, announcement expected this week

Though the Takata recall fiasco has fallen out of the headlines in recent weeks, it's about to return in a very big way.

A sign with the Takata logo is seen outside the Takata Corporation building in Auburn Hills, Michigan, U.S. (May 20, 2015).

Rebecca Cook/Reuters/File

May 5, 2016

If you're tired of hearing about , we have some bad news. Though the Takata recall fiasco has fallen out of the headlines in recent weeks--eclipsed by scandals at and , no doubt--it's about to return in a very big way.

How big? Takata-related recalls in the U.S. currently affect 28.8 million airbag inflators on 24 million vehicles, but according to聽,聽that figure could soon balloon to nearly 70 million inflators on an untold number of vehicles. An announcement is expected this week.

Sources familiar with the issue haven't provided complete details about the recall expansion. However, the move likely stems from increasing pressure from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. (That's a welcome turnaround, since the agency wasted plenty of time on this years-long recall .)

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The announcement is rumored to affect between 35 million to 40 million more Takata inflators--basically, all frontal inflators that don't make use of a drying agent. As you might recall, one of the problems with Takata's deadly airbags is that the ammonium nitrate they use becomes destabilized by moisture. That, in turn, has caused airbags to explode upon deployment, killing worldwide and injuring more than 100.

Previously, Takata had said that it would the use of ammonium nitrate in its airbag systems by 2018, and the company any airbag using the compound as unsafe unless it could prove otherwise by 2019.

In the face of mounting evidence against the use of ammonium nitrate, it appears that NHTSA has finally convinced Takata to cut its losses and replace the majority of airbags equipped with it now.聽

The new Takata recalls won't take place overnight, though. Because of ongoing parts shortages, they'll have to roll out over several years.聽

And even after these recalls are conducted, there will still be roughly equipped with ammonium nitrate roaming the streets--unless, of course, the recall expands again.

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However, we can say with certainty that the Takata recall--already the largest in auto industry history--is likely to hold that dubious honor for many, many years to come.

This article first appeared at .