Posts Tagged ‘hybrid’



DETROIT - Ford Motor Co.’s market momentum got a lift Monday by winning both the 2010 North American Car and Truck of the Year awards.

Ford’s Fusion Hybrid midsize sedan took top car honors and its versatile Transit Connect compact van snagged truck of the year at the Detroit auto show.

It was only the third time in 17 years that an automaker has won both awards, selected by 49 auto journalists and given annually since 1994. Finalists for the car award included the Buick LaCrosse and Volkswagen Golf GTI and TDI diesel. The Chevrolet Equinox, Ford Transit Connect and Subaru Outback were finalists for the truck award.

“It’s such a huge motivator for our team,” Mark Fields, Ford’s president of the Americas, told reporters after the announcements on the first day of media previews for the show. “It’s a reaffirmation of all the hard work over the past couple of years.”

The awards, given annually by journalists who test cars throughout the year, are often used by automakers in advertising. Vehicles are judged on innovation, design, safety, handling, driver satisfaction and value.

Ford, the only U.S.-based automaker to avoid bankruptcy protection, has fared better than its two Detroit rivals, with overall sales down 15 percent last year compared with a 36 percent drop for Chrysler and a 30 percent decline for GM.

Ford’s final month of 2009 was strong, with a 33 percent increase in sales thanks to strong demand for midsize cars. Last year, it gained U.S. market share for the first time since 1995, helped by critical raves for its fuel-efficient cars, like the midsize Fusion. Its compact Focus and popular Escape crossover also boosted sales.

“We still have a long way to go … getting the business back to healthy profitability,” Fields said. “We have to channel that good feeling into our efforts for 2010.”

To be considered for the car and truck of the year honors, vehicles must be new or substantially changed from the previous model.

Last year’s winners were the Hyundai Genesis luxury sedan and the Ford F-150 pickup. The Transit Connect, a small, European van, is the sixth Ford truck to win the award. Fields said the automaker thinks of it as a “white space vehicle” — one unlike anything else on the road.

“When you see this on the road, your first reaction is, ‘What is that?’” he said. “The second reaction for a lot of customers, particularly small fleets and small business owners is, ‘Hey, I want to get into that and check it out.’”

Source (article): MSNBC

Source (picture): NEWCARSCOOP

The following is a guest post by Ezra Drissman of GreenCareersGuide

The Department of Energy recently announced plans to give loans to car companies in order to retool to make cleaner, greener cars. With billions now available, these car companies will undoubtedly create more green jobs.

In order to appreciate how much this will affect the green landscape, you must understand where the money is going. The three car companies receiving loans are: Ford, Nissan and Tesla.

Ford, which has long had a stated commitment to environmental practices, boasts the 2010 Hybrid Fusion. The company will receive roughly $5.9 billion in loans, which reportedly will be used to change some of their manufacturing plants around to make more hybrid cars. Tesla Motors is receiving $465 million. The innovative startup makes an all-electric car with a battery that can travel over 200 miles on a single charge (it’s also wicked fast). Nissan received 1.6 billion.

Why are clean cars so vital to the green job movement? Imagine turning tens of thousands of car manufacturing jobs into green jobs.

Instead of having manufacturers make dirty gas guzzlers, they can make more hybrid electric and dedicated electric cars. Starting immediately, the loan money will go to directly to hire workers to retool for the clean car industry.

By 2012 not only will many jobs be created, it will also put a good amount of clean cars on our highways. There will likely be a lot more money available to car companies soon, as Chrysler and GM slowly emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Source (article): THEDAILYGREEN

Source (picture): HUFFINGTONPOST

NEW YORK - In 1973, the local newspaper in Akron, Ohio, sent a photographer to Rick Case’s filling station to take pictures of his signs bearing gas prices. The Middle East oil embargo was in full swing. Gas prices were around 30 cents a gallon and rising fast.

Case also owned the Honda dealership next-door. Before the photographer arrived, he changed the signs to read 99 cents — as high as the displays would go back then.

Case was on to something. A confluence of political and market forces gave Honda Motor Co. its big break in the U.S. in the ’70s. Consumers who were suddenly worried about gas prices snapped up fuel-efficient small cars like the Civic that Case and a handful of other Honda dealers were selling. The Japanese automaker has found success by offering Americans affordable, reliable gas-sippers ever since.

“I was really hanging my hat on Honda, and I’m glad I did,” said Case, who now owns several Honda and other dealerships in Ohio, Florida and Georgia. “The gas thing really helped get them attention.”

Honda marked its 50th anniversary in the U.S. Thursday, and new challenges confront the automaker. It will have to mount a stout defense of its turf as gas prices rise again, fuel-economy rules tighten and the market for small cars grows out of the wreckage of the Detroit Three.

“The industry is coming around to where Honda is, where (its) strengths are right now,” said Jeff Schuster, executive director of vehicle forecasting for J.D. Power & Associates. “So they face a tougher competitive landscape.”

Soaring gas prices
Japanese engineer Soichiro Honda founded Honda Motor Co. in Tokyo just three years after World War II as a manufacturer of small motorcycles. The company established American Honda Motor Co. in 1959, signed up a handful of dealers and began importing small bikes like the Honda 50 to the U.S.

The company’s first import car was the two-door N600, which sported a two-cylinder engine and a sticker price of $1,295.

Honda’s big break came with the oil embargo, which sent the price of gasoline soaring. Fuel-efficient cars from companies like Honda suddenly looked a lot more appealing to American consumers.

Between 1973 and 1976, sales of the compact Civic more than quadrupled to 132,286, and they continued climbing for another three years. By the end of the decade, Honda had opened its first U.S. plant in Marysville, Ohio, and others sprung up across Ohio, Alabama and Mexico to build products from motorcycles to lawnmowers.

Meanwhile, a relentless focus on quality control “created a contrast with where American cars were going,” said Fred Notehelfer, a professor specializing in modern Japanese history at the University of California at Los Angeles. American cars at the time, he said, “were often flashy but falling apart very quickly. … Japanese cars, especially Hondas, would keep running.”

Honda reaped the benefits of a second energy crisis last year, when an oil bubble pushed gas prices above $4 a gallon. As Detroit and its SUV-heavy lineups suffered, Civic sales in the U.S. climbed to a record 339,289.

Honda’s overall U.S. sales, however, declined 8 percent as the economy soured. The downturn accelerated and sales kept falling. The company has fought back by slashing production and offering buyouts and sweetened retirement packages to its employees.

Muscling in on Honda’s turf
The turmoil wracking the auto industry presents a paradox for Honda. On the one hand, Honda has weathered the crisis because it hasn’t depended on once-profitable gas-thirsty vehicles as much as its Detroit rivals. On the other hand, its competitors now have little choice but to muscle in on Honda’s turf.

Last month, the Obama administration laid out stricter fuel-economy rules for the auto industry, raising fleetwide average efficiency to 35.5 mpg by 2016. That’s likely to benefit Honda, which already has a sturdy lineup of fuel-efficient cars like the Fit, the Civic and the Insight hybrid. But it also means it will have to confront new competitors armed with a wider lineup of fuel-efficient cars.

“Everybody is moving kind of at warp speed toward the position to where Honda is right now,” J.D. Power’s Schuster said.

On Wednesday, Italian automaker Fiat Group SpA sealed a deal to buy the bulk of Chrysler LLC. The Auburn Hills, Mich., company is now poised to introduce new small cars to the U.S. like the two-door Fiat 500, along with vehicles branded under the sporty Alfa Romeo brand.

Chrysler’s crosstown rivals have small-car plans, too. General Motors Corp., which is also operating under bankruptcy protection, plans to start building the subcompact Chevrolet Cruze next year and says it will get about 40 miles per gallon. GM will also start selling the Chevrolet Spark minicar in the U.S. in 2011.

Meanwhile, Ford Motor Co. is bringing its popular subcompact Fiesta to the U.S. from Europe next year, and Toyota Motor Corp. is working to bring a new car to the U.S. modeled after its iQ microcar.

Honda also plans of electrify its fleet. The company, which just relaunched its Insight hybrid as a cheaper alternative to the Toyota Prius, plans to sell a hybrid based on its sporty CR-Z concept sometime in 2010. It will also offer a hybrid version of the Fit subcompact and is planning a new version of its Civic hybrid.

John Mendel, executive vice president for sales at American Honda, said the company already competes with small-car makers in Europe and plans to succeed in the U.S. by sticking to its strengths.

“We face those challenges globally now,” he said. “That’s not to diminish, certainly, the competition we see coming with a stronger, restructured GM or Chrysler or Ford.”

Source (article): MSNBC

Source (pictures): JAPANCLASSICCARGALLERY

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