Toyota Motor Corp. said it has issued a recall for 2.43 million hybrid vehicles in Japan and elsewhere for potential problems with stalling.

The company said Friday that, in rare cases, the vehicles might fail to enter a fail-safe driving mode, lose power and stall. Power steering and braking would still work but a stall at a fast speed could increase risks of a crash.

>> Read more trending news

The recall applies to some Toyota Prius and Auris hybrids made from October 2008 through November 2014. The vehicles were involved in an earlier recall that did not fix the previously unanticipated problem that is being addressed now, the company said in a statement.

Toyota said it would update the software of the vehicles for free, to remedy the problem.

The recall applies to 1.25 million vehicles in Japan; 807,000 in the U.S.; 290,000 in Europe and 3,000 in China, with the rest in other locations across the globe.

Toyota said that, by the end of September, it had received three reports in Japan related to the problem and had reported them to the transport ministry. The reported incidents did not involve accidents.

Toyota would not comment on incidents outside Japan, saying it was difficult to be certain about actual cases.

About the Author

Featured

In 2022, Georgia Power projected its winter peak electricity demand would grow by about 400 megawatts by 2031. Since then, Georgia has experienced a boom of data centers, which require a large load of electricty to run, and Georgia Power's recent forecast shows peak demand growing by 20 times the 400-megawatt estimate from just three years ago. (Illustration by Philip Robibero/AJC)

Credit: Illustration: Philip Robibero / AJC