Practical Caravan

Tow car tips: hybrid vs diesel

Plug-in hybrids promise to combine towing ability with fuel economy, but are they really as clean as they seem?

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Which is greener for towing?

‘On the face of it, the PHEV looks to be the greener choice for caravanner­s. But the reality is not quite so clear cut’

CHOOSING A TOW CAR has never been more complicate­d. Not so long ago, you might have been pondering the merits of petrol versus diesel, and manual or automatic gearboxes.

Now there are hybrids, mild hybrids and plug-in hybrids, as well as cars powered by an internal combustion engine alone. Even some pure-electric cars can tow, although those with high enough towing limits to be practical for towing a caravan tend to be prohibitiv­ely expensive.

Of all these types of powertrain, arguably the plug-in hybrid electric vehicle (PHEV) shows the most promise. Prices tend to be more affordable than the cost of pure-electric vehicles, and kerbweight­s and towing limits are often high enough to make suitable matches for ‘proper’ caravans.

The environmen­tal credential­s are set out by exceptiona­l economy and low emissions. Take the BMW 330e Touring as an example. The official fuel economy is 176.6-201.8mpg, and CO emissions are just 32-37g/km. That compares with 53.3-57.6mpg and 129-139g/km of CO in a diesel.

The PHEV has a 1500kg towing limit rather than the 1800kg for the diesel, but even the lower maximum of the 330e is sufficient to make many family four-berths legal matches, and the PHEV has a higher kerbweight than the diesel.

So on the face of it, the PHEV is by far the greener choice for a caravanner looking for excellent economy and low emissions.

Real-world results

The reality, however, is not quite so clear-cut. Of all the ways of powering a modern car, none delivers such widely varying real-world results as the PHEV.

Cynics might dismiss 200mpg as a fantasy economy figure which typical owners will never achieve, but in fact, some drivers may do considerab­ly better. Let’s say that you commute 10 miles each way during the week, and have off-street parking and a home charger. At the weekend you might nip into town for a bit of shopping, but you mostly stay local and sometimes don’t take the car out.

The BMW 330e Touring has an official all-electric range of 34.8-37.3 miles. Let’s be cautious and say that 25 miles on each charge is achievable. An owner who rarely makes long journeys could conceivabl­y go for weeks without filling up, travelling hundreds of miles without using a drop of fuel.

On the other hand, let’s say someone has no off-street parking, and there are no chargers at their workplace. They have the best of intentions to recharge using the public charging network, but in practice, often don’t find the time. As the battery is usually at a low state of charge, they are carrying around the weight of a heavy battery pack with little benefit. This type of driver will never get close to 200mpg.

Tim Dickson is the founder of Ecomore, a driver training and consultanc­y company. He believes PHEVS have their place, but will suit some drivers and not others. “You have to start every journey with a full battery,” he says.

Company car drivers might be tempted to choose a PHEV because they attract lower benefit-in-kind tax bills than petrols or diesels, but it doesn’t follow that they are an environmen­tally sound choice unless they are regularly recharged. “People look at their tax bill, which is completely the wrong perspectiv­e,” he adds.

For a short-journey driver with access to daily charging, a petrol or diesel car will cost more to fuel and will emit more than a PHEV. But while the economy of an internal combustion engine will vary, depending on the type of journey, the peaks and troughs in fuel economy are nothing like as steep as a PHEV’S.

This subject has been closely investigat­ed by Emissions Analytics, a specialist in independen­t emissions testing. The company has calculated that a PHEV needs to run on battery power for around 80% of the time to achieve CO emissions consistent with the official test results. According to the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion, the proportion of PHEV mileage travelled on battery power is closer to 37%.

Towing with a PHEV

Back in 2019, we put five cars through an economy test at the Tow Car Awards – three diesels, one petrol and one PHEV. Each car drove for an hour on the test track’s two-mile long straights, at 60mph on the straights and 40mph on the connecting bends.

The cars towed caravans weighing 85% of their kerbweight, or in the case of the PHEV, a van weighted to its legal towing limit (less than the 85% figure). The tanks of each car were brimmed before and after the test, and the PHEV started with a full battery.

Despite starting out fully charged, the PHEV (a Mitsubishi Outlander) returned the worst economy of the five, achieving 23.4mpg. The best diesel returned 33mpg.

More recently, however, we’ve started to see better economy figures from some of the PHEVS we’ve tested. When towing a 1450kg caravan, a VW Passat GTE returned 29.3mpg over 73 miles, starting with the batteries at full charge. That compares well with the 28.4mpg we achieved with a diesel Passat Alltrack on the same route and a similar van, although it’s reasonable to assume the Passat GTE’S economy would worsen on a longer trip.

Conclusion

So which is cleaner, a PHEV or a diesel? This question is more complicate­d than you might think, especially if you consider NOX and particulat­e emissions, as well as CO , which we barely have space to touch upon here.

Judged purely as tow cars, a good turbodiese­l will deliver better fuel economy and emit less CO than a PHEV on a long journey. On shorter trips, with the hybrid starting with a full battery, the two types of car will be more evenly matched.

Even the keenest caravanner is likely to cover far more miles without a caravan in tow. If those journeys are short, and the driver can recharge often from renewable energy, a PHEV can be a very green choice. But for long journeys, especially without regular recharging, the advantage swings back towards the diesel tow car.

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