Sign in
Edition of 10:00 CETSaturday, July 11, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages513 briefings today
Crime & DisastersThursday, July 9, 2026

Kia Tells 463,000 US Owners to Park Outdoors as Telluride Fire Recall Expands

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration warns that front seat motors can overheat and cause fires, while Nissan and Honda also announce separate recalls.

Nearly half a million owners of Kia Telluride crossovers in the United States have been instructed to park their vehicles outdoors and away from structures, after US safety regulators expanded a recall over a fire risk that persists even when the engine is off. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said the front power seat motor can overheat if the slide knob becomes stuck or if a previous repair was performed incorrectly, potentially causing a fire whether the vehicle is parked or in motion. Kia is aware of seven seat fires and eleven instances of seat motors melting, according to the agency. The recall covers approximately 463,000 Tellurides from model years 2020 through 2024, many of which were already recalled for the same defect in 2024. Dealers will install an electronic fuse assembly to prevent the motor from running continuously, with owner notifications expected to begin on 13 August.

Separately, Nissan announced two smaller recall campaigns affecting about 1,000 vehicles in the US. The larger of the two involves 946 Sentra sedans from the 2025 model year, where the left front drive shaft may not be fully seated in the continuously variable transmission. According to filings with NHTSA, the incomplete insertion can lead to a loss of drive power, transmission fluid leaks, and a risk that the car could move even with the parking brake engaged. The problem was traced to a supplier’s production equipment that created an oversized bearing face, compromising the seal. A second campaign covers 42 transmission units in Rogue crossovers from model years 2022 to 2026, many of them remanufactured. A hardware fault in the control valve lock switch can prevent the gear indicator from displaying on the dashboard, violating federal safety standards, and may cause the transmission to remain in neutral without the driver’s knowledge.

In a third action, the US arm of Honda has launched a recall of 325,588 Odyssey minivans, Russian media reported, though the specific defect was not immediately detailed. The series of recalls highlights the heightened scrutiny of vehicle electronics and mechanical assemblies by American safety regulators. All three automakers have said they will notify affected owners and perform repairs free of charge.

Divergence — who tells it how
0%Low
2 blocs · positions from 0.00 to 0.00
CriticalFavorable
RUSATL
Divergence between press blocs
Russian & CIS press0.00neutral
Atlantic / Anglosphere press0.00neutral
Korean media, representing the directly involved party Kia, are not present in this cluster.
Russian & CIS press0.00
Voice

Russia reports the recall as a technical matter, without emphasizing the danger.

Mechanismdistanziamento

Russia makes its position plausible through a detached tone and citation of official sources, without adding commentary.

Omission

Russia omits the specific incident details (seven fires, eleven melted motors) and the urgency to park outdoors, which appear in the Atlantic coverage.

DetachmentPragmatism
Atlantic / Anglosphere press0.00
Voice

The Atlantic warns owners of a serious fire risk and urges them to park outdoors.

Mechanismallarmismo

The Atlantic makes its position plausible by using alarming language and citing concrete incident numbers, creating a sense of imminent danger.

AlarmUrgency

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
Russia Suspends Azov-Don Canal Shipping After Ukrainian Drone Strikes·Explosions East of Tehran Attributed to Controlled Munitions Disposal Amid Heightened Regional Alert·A Sydney School, a Polynesian Princess, and a Remake That Divided Critics·The Joy of Children, Deferred: How Young Couples Weigh Hope Against Hardship·Egypt's historic run halted by Argentina's late three-goal salvo·A Black Bull Breaks Away: Goring, Crowds, and the Ghost of Hemingway at San Fermín·Global Immigration Curbs and Consular Gaps Fuel Migrant Uncertainty·The Psychology of Repetition: How Mundane Habits Build Certainty in an Uncertain World·Russia Suspends Azov-Don Canal Shipping After Ukrainian Drone Strikes·Explosions East of Tehran Attributed to Controlled Munitions Disposal Amid Heightened Regional Alert·A Sydney School, a Polynesian Princess, and a Remake That Divided Critics·The Joy of Children, Deferred: How Young Couples Weigh Hope Against Hardship·Egypt's historic run halted by Argentina's late three-goal salvo·A Black Bull Breaks Away: Goring, Crowds, and the Ghost of Hemingway at San Fermín·Global Immigration Curbs and Consular Gaps Fuel Migrant Uncertainty·The Psychology of Repetition: How Mundane Habits Build Certainty in an Uncertain World·
Upd. 07:04 PM4 languages · 6 outlets
PreviousCrime & DisastersNext
6 outlets|4 languages|2 min read
Thursday, July 9, 2026

Kia Tells 463,000 US Owners to Park Outdoors as Telluride Fire Recall Expands

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration warns that front seat motors can overheat and cause fires, while Nissan and Honda also announce separate recalls.

Nearly half a million owners of Kia Telluride crossovers in the United States have been instructed to park their vehicles outdoors and away from structures, after US safety regulators expanded a recall over a fire risk that persists even when the engine is off. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said the front power seat motor can overheat if the slide knob becomes stuck or if a previous repair was performed incorrectly, potentially causing a fire whether the vehicle is parked or in motion. Kia is aware of seven seat fires and eleven instances of seat motors melting, according to the agency. The recall covers approximately 463,000 Tellurides from model years 2020 through 2024, many of which were already recalled for the same defect in 2024. Dealers will install an electronic fuse assembly to prevent the motor from running continuously, with owner notifications expected to begin on 13 August.

Separately, Nissan announced two smaller recall campaigns affecting about 1,000 vehicles in the US. The larger of the two involves 946 Sentra sedans from the 2025 model year, where the left front drive shaft may not be fully seated in the continuously variable transmission. According to filings with NHTSA, the incomplete insertion can lead to a loss of drive power, transmission fluid leaks, and a risk that the car could move even with the parking brake engaged. The problem was traced to a supplier’s production equipment that created an oversized bearing face, compromising the seal. A second campaign covers 42 transmission units in Rogue crossovers from model years 2022 to 2026, many of them remanufactured. A hardware fault in the control valve lock switch can prevent the gear indicator from displaying on the dashboard, violating federal safety standards, and may cause the transmission to remain in neutral without the driver’s knowledge.

In a third action, the US arm of Honda has launched a recall of 325,588 Odyssey minivans, Russian media reported, though the specific defect was not immediately detailed. The series of recalls highlights the heightened scrutiny of vehicle electronics and mechanical assemblies by American safety regulators. All three automakers have said they will notify affected owners and perform repairs free of charge.

Divergence — who tells it how
0%Low
2 blocs · positions from 0.00 to 0.00
CriticalFavorable
RUSATL
Divergence between press blocs
Russian & CIS press0.00neutral
Atlantic / Anglosphere press0.00neutral
Korean media, representing the directly involved party Kia, are not present in this cluster.
Russian & CIS press0.00
Voice

Russia reports the recall as a technical matter, without emphasizing the danger.

Mechanismdistanziamento

Russia makes its position plausible through a detached tone and citation of official sources, without adding commentary.

Omission

Russia omits the specific incident details (seven fires, eleven melted motors) and the urgency to park outdoors, which appear in the Atlantic coverage.

DetachmentPragmatism
Atlantic / Anglosphere press0.00
Voice

The Atlantic warns owners of a serious fire risk and urges them to park outdoors.

Mechanismallarmismo

The Atlantic makes its position plausible by using alarming language and citing concrete incident numbers, creating a sense of imminent danger.

AlarmUrgency

This story appeared in

6 outlets · 4 languages

Broaden your view

From Geopolitics & Politics

Trump Declares Iran Ceasefire Over, Yet Agrees to Continue Talks

5 languages · 17 outlets

From Economy & Markets

SK Hynix’s $26.5bn US listing sets record as AI chip demand defies geopolitical jitters

4 languages · 8 outlets

From Technology

Meta Halts AI Image Tool After Global Backlash as EU Cites Addictive Design

8 languages · 16 outlets

Read more