TOKYO/DETROIT: Toyota said it would file the recall in Japan on June 28, covering 90,000 high-end sedans, as the world's largest automaker continues to ramp up its safety oversight following a string of recalls.
An official at Japan's transport ministry said he had been informed that Toyota was also planning a recall in North America and Europe. Toyota officials in the United States said an internal investigation will be completed next week into the engines, but they did not say whether the cars would be recalled.
Toyota declined to confirm the reported cost estimate for the recalls, which would amount to a relatively steep 74,000 yen a vehicle.
Since last September, Toyota has been plagued by a safety crisis that has led to the recall of more than 10 million vehicles globally, mostly for potential unintended acceleration. About 7.3 million vehicles have been recalled in the United States, the automaker's biggest market.
The latest potential safety defect covers seven Lexus sedan models and the Toyota Crown sedan whose engines could stall in rare cases due to faulty valve springs. About half of the 270,000 vehicles were sold in the United States. [Beleaguered Toyota to recall 270,000 cars globally]
No accidents or injuries have been reported, Toyota said.
The Lexus models in the possible stalling issue are the GS 350, GS 450h, GS 460, IS 350, LS 460, LS 600h and LS 600hl. The models marked by "h" are gasoline-electric hybrids.
The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration had not received any communication from Toyota regarding the issue by Thursday, according to a Department of Transportation spokeswoman.
The recall would be the second for the luxury Lexus brand since June 25, when Toyota told US and Canadian safety regulators it was halting sales and recalling about 17,000 Lexus HS 250h hybrid sedans due to a potential fuel leak.
Some 13,000 HS 250h vehicles were sold in the United States, and about 17,000 have been built to sell in the US market, Toyota told its US Lexus dealers in a letter last Friday.
Toyota's own crash test did not show the fuel leak problem. The automaker, in the letter to US Lexus dealers, said it was trying to understand why the government tests showed the fuel leakage problem while the company's own crash tests did not.
The automaker told dealers it has not received any reports of injuries or accidents linked to the potential problem with the HS 250h sedan.
Toyota shares ended flat on Friday morning in Tokyo, roughly in line with Japan's benchmark Nikkei average.
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A Lexus GS car |