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Toyota announces mass Prius recall
Posted: 10 February 2010 0224 hrs

  Toyota Motor's hybrid Prius at a showroom in Tokyo.
 
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TOKYO: Toyota said on Tuesday it was recalling hundreds of thousands of hybrid vehicles globally, including the best-selling Prius, plunging it deeper into crisis as lawsuits in the United States piled up.

Toyota, facing a barrage of complaints ranging from unintended acceleration to brake failure, is scrambling to reassure drivers it did not sacrifice safety in its successful drive to be the world's largest automaker.

But in another heavy blow to its brand image, long synonymous with reliability and quality, Toyota said it was pulling 437,000 Prius and other hybrid vehicles from the road to repair a flaw in the braking system.

The company is now recalling almost 8.7 million vehicles around the world - far more than its entire 2009 global sales of 7.8 million vehicles.

Toyota president Akio Toyoda said in an opinion piece appearing in Tuesday's Washington Post that he accepted "personal responsibility" for the automaker's recalls and vowed to rebuild confidence in the company.

The Toyoda family scion, under fire for his handling of the crisis, said the company would set up a new team of engineers in the United States to improve quality control and safety.

"I have launched a top-to-bottom review of our global operations to ensure that problems of this magnitude do not happen again and that we not only meet but exceed the high safety standards that have defined our long history."

Toyota is facing a raft of lawsuits in the United States. In one of the latest, a California woman is alleging her Prius has severe braking problems which make it dangerous to drive.

Lawyers for the plaintiff are pursuing what is believed to be the first class-action lawsuit over the faulty Prius brakes.

The company is pulling roughly 223,000 hybrids in Japan and about 147,500 in the United States due to a problem with the anti-lock braking system, in a recall that also extends to Europe and other markets.

The move covers the newest petrol-electric Prius as well as the plug-in Prius, the Sai sedan and the Lexus HS250h. It will suspend sales in Japan of the Sai and Lexus HS250h while it develops a fix for those vehicles.

Drivers "can experience reduced braking performance resulting in increased braking distance," the automaker said in a statement.

The Prius is the world's most popular hybrid, beloved of Hollywood stars and environmentalists alike, and its troubles are a major setback to Toyota's efforts to stay ahead in fuel-efficient automobiles.

Favoured by celebrities including Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Cameron Diaz and Britain's Prince Charles, nearly 1.5 million Prius vehicles had been sold in 40 countries as of August 31.

The Japanese car maker has said it redesigned the anti-lock braking system for Prius cars produced since last month.

It says a delay occurs when the vehicle switches to the conventional hydraulic brake from regenerative braking, used by hybrids to capture the energy of the car's motion to recharge the battery for its electric motor.

The brake trouble comes on top of recalls of more than eight million vehicles worldwide due to sticking accelerator pedals that have been blamed for a number of crashes, some deadly.

The group has denied it was slow to act on the safety problems.

But Toyoda was publicly rebuked by Japan's transport minister, who said the company should have been quicker to recall vehicles with a brake flaw.

The company received a US report of a sticky gas pedal on a Tundra pick-up truck in 2007 but said it was unable to pinpoint the cause.

Toyota has said it expects the gas pedal-related recalls alone to cost it about two billion dollars in recall expenses and lost sales. But analysts warn the bigger impact could be to its reputation in the long term.

The US House of Representative's oversight and government reform committee is to publicly grill the automaker's top brass as well as federal regulators on Wednesday over the crisis.

"There appears to be a growing body of evidence that neither Toyota nor the (US government's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration) have identified all the causes of sudden unintended acceleration in Toyota vehicles," said a memo from the committee to lawmakers dated February 5 but released on Tuesday.

US President Barack Obama's administration said it would "hold" Toyota to its promise to take safety concerns seriously. - AFP/de

 


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