Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Toyota to expand hybrid system developmen­t to cut emissions further

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Toyota Motor Corp said on Tuesday it will expand the developmen­t of its gasoline-hybrid technology over the next five years to speed up the introducti­on of lower-emission engines in the face of stricter global emissions standards.

The announceme­nt was the latest by the Japanese firm aimed at making cars ‘greener’ as global automakers face tighter regulation­s in China, the United States and other regions that will require more environmen­t-friendly cars in the coming years.

Toyota is also stepping up the developmen­t of longerrang­e battery-electric cars, in a shift from an earlier strategy of promoting hydrogen fuel-cell technology as the future of zero-emission vehicles.

“We need to take an aggressive approach to deal with changing regulation­s,” Toshiyuki Mizushima, president of Toyota’s power train division, told reporters at a briefing.

Toyota said it would expand personnel on its hybrid technology developmen­t team by 30 percent through 2021, by which time it aims to introduce 19 new loweremiss­ion power train components made on its recently introduced common manufactur­ing platform.

By 2021, at least 60 percent of Toyota vehicles sold in Japan, the United States, Europe and China will feature new components which will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 15 percent or more compared with the average amount of emissions of vehicles sold in 2015, the automaker said.

Toyota’s hybrid push comes as regulators require automakers to produce more electric cars, while hybrid technology, introduced in the Toyota Prius nearly 20 years ago, is increasing­ly considered as convention­al technology.

But Mizushima said that hybrid technology would be key to developing more zero-emission vehicles.

“The core technology of plug-in hybrids and electric and fuel-cell vehicles is based on hybrid technology. By increasing our hybrid team, we can leverage new developmen­ts for use in electric power trains,” he said.

Toyota is speeding up the developmen­t of loweremiss­ion cars, last month appointing President Akio Toyoda to lead a new electric car division to accelerate the developmen­t of battery-powered cars.

The automaker, which sells around 10 million vehicles a year, has pledged to reduce global average CO2 emissions of its new vehicles by around 90 percent by 2050.

Towards this end, Mizushima said that he expected the take-up of hybrid vehicles to increase, accounting for around 20 percent of Toyota’s global annual vehicle sales by 2025, from around 10 percent now.

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