Khaleej Times

Green is in at auto show

Car makers demonstrat­e efforts to meet regulatory demands

- Melissa Mittelman and John Lippert — Bloomberg

new york — Automakers revealed an assortment of fuel-efficient electric and hybrid models at the New York auto show, demonstrat­ing their efforts to meet regulatory demands even as US consumers snap up sport utility vehicles and pickups amid relatively cheap gasoline.

Hyundai Motor Co showed off three Ioniq models: a hybrid, a plug-in hybrid and a battery-powered version. Toyota Motor Corp wheeled out a new plug-in version of its hybrid line called Prius Prime. The Koenigsegg Regera supercar revealed on Thursday combines electric drive with a V-8 engine to generate more than 1,500 horsepower. Among SUVs, Toyota showed a hybrid version of its Highlander, Honda Motor Co’s Acura MDX will get a new ‘sport hybrid’ option and even the Maserati Levante is available in hybrid form.

The offerings reflect the pressure on automakers to meet US requiremen­ts to boost average fuel-economy ratings to 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025 as well as rules in states such as California demanding more sales of zero-emission vehicles.

“Automakers simply must be willing to take a loss on the mainstream hybrids, etc. until market conditions are more favorable,” Jeff Schuster, a Troy, Michiganba­sed analyst with LMC Automotive, said in an e-mail on Wednesday. “This is easy to do when you are printing money from SUV and pickup sales.”

Honda aims to have hybrids or other clean technologi­es account for two thirds of its sales by

Mazda’s programme manager for the Mazda MX-5 Nobuhiro Yamamoto and president of Mazda North American Operations Masahiro Moro with the 2016 World Car Award for Car of the Year at the New York Internatio­nal Auto Show on Thursday. The 2016 Mazda MX-5 received the grand prize as well as the 2016 World Car Award for Design of the Year.

John Mendel,

Executive Vice President, Honda

2030, Executive Vice President John Mendel said in an interview on Thursday at Bloomberg headquarte­rs in New York. He said that hybrids and pure electrics are a ‘mainstay’ for the industry as regulators impose restrictio­ns on fuel consumptio­n.

“The EV strategy

is

still

alive

— AFP and well,” he said. ”Fuel is a finite commodity” and prices “will go up again.” The hardest part of meeting the regulation­s isn’t developing the technology, he said— it’s getting consumers to buy the cars. As of now, regulators are relying on ‘hope’ that consumers will want to buy the more efficient vehicles, he said.

“Hope probably shouldn’t be our only strategy,” Mendel said. The US needs “something that makes an economic case for the consumer to do what the government wants them to do, which is consume less fossil fuels.” The mar-

The EV strategy is still alive and well

ket share of green cars fell 18 per cent from last year through the first two months of 2016, and down by more than a third from their peak in 2013, said Jessica Caldwell, an analyst with Edmunds.com, in part because traditiona­l cars have gotten more efficient.

Offering an electric vehicle means “you’re asking people to adopt a slightly different driving experience,” she said. “For consumers trading in an older vehicle, they are likely to see a nice bump in the fuel economy, and for many people that is enough.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates