BANGKOK, June 5 (Reuters) – Thailand’s consumer watchdog has approved the filing ​of a civil lawsuit against the local unit of ‌Volvo Cars and its repair and maintenance unit, Scandinavian Auto Co. Ltd, over battery-related fires in its EX30 model, Pradoemchai Bunchualuai, an adviser to ​the minister who chairs the watchdog, told Reuters by ​phone on Friday.
The legal move comes after a meeting in ⁠Bangkok last month between Volvo Cars, the consumer protection ​board and customers failed to reach an agreement.
The Office of the ​Consumer Protection Board will act as a plaintiff for 550 complaints and will file each suit individually, Pradoemchai said. Next week the office ​will send the first case, which is seeking 1.2 million ​baht ($36,750) in damages, to the public prosecutor, he said.
The Thai unit of ‌Volvo ⁠Cars did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. Volvo Cars declined to comment.
Reuters reported in February that Volvo would recall more than 40,000 EX30s globally and replace battery modules ​due to a ​defect that could ⁠cause packs to overheat and potentially catch fire. Volvo has subsequently said the number of ​vehicles in the recall has been reduced to ​37,802 ⁠from 40,323
Volvo Cars has said there were some delays to battery replacements due to the Iran war. It has said incidents ⁠remain ​rare, with fires reported in well ​under 0.1% of affected vehicles.
($1 = 32.6500 baht)

Reporting by Chayut Setboonsarng and Panarat Thepgumpanat, ​Additional reporting by Marie Mannes in Stockolm, Editing by John Mair