Rivals Turn up Heat to Challenge Toyota Hybrid Push
01/13/2006
Source: LOHAS Weekly
Newsletter
Author: Planet Ark
Japan's top auto maker has gained a reputation
as a "green" company with its popular Prius and other
gasoline-electric hybrids, and is keen to see the technology take
off globally.
After selling about 250,000 hybrid vehicles globally last year,
Toyota is targeting sales of 400,000 units in 2006 with the
addition of versions of the Lexus LS and Toyota Camry hybrids -
the two brands' flagship sedans.
"It is clear today that hybrid technology has moved solidly
into the mainstream especially among consumers who are
environmentally aware, and want to make a difference for future
generations," Don Esmond, senior vice president at Toyota Motor
Sales USA., said at the Camry hybrid's launch at the North
American International Auto Show here this week.
But rivals sought to tone down the hype, citing high costs to
manufacturers and consumers and claiming "inflated truths" about
vastly improved mileage. Hybrids twin a conventional combustion
engine and an electric motor to save fuel.
"I hate selling cars at a loss," Nissan Motor Co. and Renault
SA Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn told reporters, saying hybrids
were not a profitable proposition.
Nissan will bring out its first hybrid with the Altima sedan
later this year, but says it was only because average fleet fuel
economy regulations in California require it.
Ghosn repeated that Japan's second-biggest auto maker will
bring diesel passenger vehicles to the United States.
Even Honda Motor Co., which introduced the first hybrid car to
the United States with the two-seater Insight in 1999, is not
ready to endorse hybrids as the future mainstream for green cars
just yet.
"We'll figure out over the next year whether hybrids are a
cost-effective proposal for big-volume production," Chief
Executive Takeo Fukui told Reuters recently. "By no means have we
reached that conclusion yet."
Honda has said that zero-emission fuel-cell vehicles should be
the ultimate goal for the industry since supply of its power
source, hydrogen, is inexhaustible.
Fukui said in Detroit this week that Honda would aim to begin
leasing a roomier, cheaper and more practical fuel-cell vehicle
within the next three to four years.
Japan's third-ranked auto maker by volume also said it would
offer diesel cars in the United States, following European brands
such as Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen AG into the nascent segment.
DIESEL POWER
The most vocal challenge against gasoline-electric hybrids came
from Germany's DaimlerChrysler AG, which zealously supported
diesel engines. Diesels get 20 to 40 percent better fuel economy
than gasoline vehicles and now power more than half of all cars
sold in Europe.
Unveiling the Mercedes E320 BLUETEC diesel car to be launched
this fall and which features what DaimlerChrysler touted as the
"cleanest diesel in the world," CEO Dieter Zetsche said diesels
offered an excellent solution to weaning the United States off of
foreign oil.
"If we had a light duty vehicle population that was one-third
diesels, that could save up to 1.4 million barrels of oil per day
in the US - the amount the US currently imports from Saudi
Arabia," Zetsche said, citing a study by the Environmental
Protection Agency.
DaimlerChrysler said sales of its current E-Class diesel had
been booming since August as more Americans take to the torque,
performance and fuel economy that diesels can offer.
Indeed, hybrids have increasingly faced sobering publicity
about the "myth" of real-life fuel economy. Many drivers have
reported to be disillusioned about underperforming the advertised
mileage on their hybrids, which are most effective in stop-and-go
city driving but help little on highways.
But hybrids are certainly on all major auto makers' radar.
General Motors Corp. unveiled two hybrid models, the Saturn Vue
Green Line car and the Chevrolet Tahoe SUV, at the Detroit show,
while crosstown rival Ford Motor Co. has pledged a 10-fold
increase in hybrid output by 2010.
Research firm J.D. Power and Associates last week projected
hybrid vehicles to make up 4.2 percent of the US light vehicle
market by 2012, up from around 1.3 percent last year. Its latest
forecast for diesel penetration was a growth to 7.5 percent in
2012 from 3 percent in 2004.
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