National Post

VOLVO’S ELECTRIFYI­NG NEWS,

MOTOR MOUTH

- David Booth Driving. ca

My, oh my, didn’ t Volvo just let the cat l oose among the pigeons! What seemed like a normal news week, with the mainstream media trying to make headlines out of a boring G20 conference, exploded with news that Volvo was “abandoning” the internal combustion engine.

Even Donald Trump’s failed handshake didn’t garner as much attention and Emmanuel Macron’s threat to impose capitalism on his socialist French subjects was relegated to Page 2 news.

OK, I exaggerate. But, nonetheles­s, there was much fevered talk of internal combustion’s impending Waterloo. Hard questions were posed: Would Big Oil be out of business in the next few years? Would all Volvos really be electric by 2019? And how did the Swedes suddenly jump to the front of the emissions-free queue? Indeed, so dramatic was the alarm that it behooves us to step back, take a deep breath and put Volvo’s news release into perspectiv­e.

Officially, Volvo’s statement promised to “electrify” all its cars by 2019. That didn’t stop some in the media from implying the automaker would soon convert its entire fleet into Tesla- like electric vehicles; The New York Times declared “Volvo Cars became the first mainstream automaker to sound the death knell of the internal combustion engine.”

In fact, what the company’s official statement proclaims is that, by 2019, it “will introduce a portfolio of electrifie­d cars across its model range, embracing fully electric cars, plug- in hybrid cars and mild- hybrid cars.” The key word in that sentence, I suspect, is “mild,” as in some — probably most — of the electrifie­d vehicles the Chinese- owned automaker is promising will be mild hybrids. Depending on your perspectiv­e, mild hybrids are either hardly electric ( Elon Musk decrying anything that still sports a piston and a connecting rod) or the near-term future of mobility (European manufactur­ers looking to get out from under their seemingly never- ending diesel catastroph­e).

Essentiall­y, what a mild hybrid does is replace a gasoline engine’s traditiona­l alternator with a high- voltage motor- generator unit ( MGU). By souping up the electric system, mild hybrids are able to extend the operation of current stop/start mechanisms — those annoying systems that shut down your engine when you stop and then instantly start them again when you put your foot on the gas — to shut down the gas engine when you’re coasting on the highway, flying down hills or just noodling around town. They also allow a little brake regenerati­on — recouping electrical charge when the car is braking — and can even act as a (very mild) power booster. They are also more efficient at driving ancillarie­s such as modern electric power steering systems, reducing the parasitic drag on the engine.

You’ll note that nowhere did I mention an electric motor, Prius- like, driving the vehicle’s wheels. That’s because current mild hybrids can only indirectly supply power to the wheels — essentiall­y through the alternator’s rubber belt to the gasoline engine — but not to the wheels directly. The gas engine still does all the grunt work, the small MGU serving only as an assist. So why the hubbub? Well, for one thing, European automakers are desperate for a low- cost gasoline/electric alternativ­e to the much- denigrated diesel engine, while suppliers are touting fuel consumptio­n improvemen­ts of greater than 10 per cent for mild hybridizat­ion. For another, mild hybrids are c omparative­ly dirt cheap, costing between US$ 600 and US$ 1,000 to add a 48- volt charging system to a vehicle.

Indeed, cost is why I suspect most of the “electrific­ation” that Volvo is promising will be mild. By way of example, the company’s XC90 T6 sport ute is powered by Volvo’s incredibly efficient supercharg­ed and turbocharg­ed 2.0- litre four- cylinder engine. The T8 version of the same vehicle takes that powertrain and adds an electric motor and a 9.2 kilowatt-hour battery. A true “plug- in,” the T8 eAWD can travel about 20 kilometres on electric power alone and is rated at a little over nine L/100km compared with the 10.6 L/ 100 km the gasolineon­ly T6 consumes.

The problem is the T8 costs $74,450 versus the T6’s $ 62,700. I’ ll save you reaching for your iPhone; the difference is $11,750. The smaller XC60 sees an even bigger $17,350 jump to the T8 plugin version. So, unless Volvo is determined to commit självmord ( the Swedish word commonly denoting suicide also happens to mean selfdestru­ction) we shouldn’t be looking for plug- in powertrain­s in every 2019 V60. Indeed, chances are that for the foreseeabl­e future the vast majority of all Volvos will still be powered by good old internal combustion.

Does this diminish the import of Volvo’s pronouncem­ent? I’d say no, not at all. Even mild hybrids are a worthwhile step forward, one that will reduce the company’s carbon footprint. To universali­ze that technology is noteworthy news. Besides, Volvo is also promising to unveil five actual electric vehicles between 2019 and 2021.

Perhaps more i mportantly, does this advance the cause of electric vehicles?

Well, yes and no. The yes part of that answer lies in furthering the perception that electrific­ation is inevitable. Other automakers will no doubt view the reaction to Volvo’s pronouncem­ent with envy and want to capitalize on similar statements. On the no side, it’s doubtful it will spur any new advancemen­t. Why Volvo has the upper hand in this race is that it uses essentiall­y the same 2.0-L four-cylinder to power all of its cars. This gives Volvo a huge advantage compared with giants such as General Motors in only having to only re-engineer one powertrain, as opposed to many.

The ultimate irony, however, is that mild hybrids are hardly new. What is now being celebrated as a breakthrou­gh for Volvo was first introduced, almost a decade ago, by none other than GM as its belt- alternator- starter system ( BAS) on Saturn, Buick and Chevrolet engines. The American version of mild electrific­ation was roundly decried as less than hybrid and sold poorly.

Sometimes, public relations are way more important than engineerin­g.

 ?? JONAS EKSTROMER / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Volvo Cars chief executive Hakan Samuelsson speaks at a showroom in Stockholm, Sweden. He says all Volvo cars will be electric or hybrid within two years, but David Booth points out that may not be as revolution­ary as it seems.
JONAS EKSTROMER / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Volvo Cars chief executive Hakan Samuelsson speaks at a showroom in Stockholm, Sweden. He says all Volvo cars will be electric or hybrid within two years, but David Booth points out that may not be as revolution­ary as it seems.

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