The Arizona Republic

Cars lighten load to meet fuel standards

- By Dan Morrell Wall Street Journal Journal, Wall Street

BOSTON — When anonymous Ford executives told the

last summer that the company would be switching out the steel body of its iconic F-150 pickup for an all-aluminum one beginning in 2014, many brand loyalists at the Ford Truck Enthusiast­s forum were somewhat skeptical.

Price was a concern, given that aluminum can cost as much as four times as much as steel. Others noted that aluminum is harder to repair, given that fewer body shops are equipped to work with the metal: “(I)t’s not like you can just have a dent service repair it when you get a door ding or worse.”

And then there was the toughness factor, with many complainin­g that aluminum just doesn’t evoke that same masculine/cowboy/fulfilled-bymanual-labor aesthetic: “I like my old steel pickup, I like the feeling of having heavy protection rather then feeling like a soda can on wheels.”

Ford would later label the executives’ prediction premature. Still, it prompted the question: Why would America’s most popular pickup risk alienating its base? Because as the Ford execs noted, an aluminum body would shave 700 pounds off of the truck’s total weight — and the less weight the engine has to move, the less gas it will have to use.

“Weight reduction,” Ford’s global chief of product developmen­t told the

“is going to be a big part of our strategy.”

It’s possible that the gains in fuel economy will attract new customers, mitigating the loss of those loyalists who prefer the more traditiona­l steel horse. And maybe Ford is seriously concerned with the health of Mother Earth. But the carmaker also didn’t have much of a choice.

In July 2011, the Obama administra­tion reached an agreement with Ford and a dozen other major automakers — along with the UAW and the EPA — to dramatical­ly increase vehicle fuel-efficiency standards on all cars and light trucks sold in the United States. By 2025, every carmaker’s fleet would have to average 54.5 miles per gallon. It represente­d a near-doubling of the current standard of 29 miles per gallon — roughly the highway fuel efficiency of a Ford Taurus.

Environmen­tal groups mostly celebrated the move — the Union of Concerned Scientists, for instance, deemed it “a very positive developmen­t.” (Although, as financial writer Felix Salmon at Reuters has noted, the new standard will still leave us lagging behind just about every other government fuel-efficiency standard in the developed world.)

Conservati­ves were, predictabl­y, not enthused. When the terms were finalized in summer 2012, a post-primary but pre-centrist Mitt Romney called the measures extreme, arguing that they would “limit the choices available to American families.”

Automakers, perhaps a bit more amenable to regulation­s because of the bailout, publicly offered their endorsemen­t. But there was some market wariness about both the desire for such vehicles and the quick time line for such a major move.

But it’s not like this call for greater fuel efficiency caught carmakers by surprise. The passage of the Energy Independen­ce and Security Act in 2007 had already set a goal for the national fuel-economy standard of 35 mpg by 2020 — marking the first substantiv­e change since Congress set the original standard of 27.5 mpg in 1975 (to be reached by 1985) in the wake of the OPEC oil crisis. Obama’s two subsequent goalpost relocation­s — first pushing George W. Bush’s original plan up to 35.5 mpg by 2016 and then extending it with the 54.5-by-2025 plan — just demanded that carmakers act a bit more quickly.

So now the auto industry is forced to tackle something they were able to mostly ignore for a quarter of a century. Romney’s defeat meant the standards would stick, so where to start?

Some have opted for the direct route, tinkering and tweaking the engine. GM’s new Corvette, for instance, offers something called “active fuel management,” in which the car cuts off half of the engine’s cylinders during what it calls “light load” situations like highway coasting. Ford’s new Fusion model offers a similar fuel-saving function — a “start-stop” feature that shuts the engine down when the car is idling. Each of the Big Three are rolling out models that run on clean diesel — a more efficient, low-sulfur version of the fuel — this year.

But all of that takes painstakin­g engineerin­g and lots of R&D hours. The quicker, easier route to fuel efficiency, it seems, is the one that Ford is pursuing with its aluminum F-150: focus on the materials, not the mechanics.

And Ford’s aluminum trial is no outlier. The director of automotive marketing for aluminum giant Alcoa told the crowd at the American Metal Market’s Aluminum Summit last summer that increased calls for fuel efficiency will double the demand for aluminum by 2025.

Sure, that’s what a director of marketing is supposed to say at an trade summit, but he’s backed up by Alcoa’s $300 million investment in an Iowa plant that specialize­s in automotive products.

Range Rover’s 2013 American Land Rover model is taking the same approach as the Ford F-150 and getting the same result, trimming 700 pounds from what was previously a 5,500-pound SUV. Chrysler’s Dodge Ram and Chevy’s Silverado pickups are rumored to be getting the same aluminum overhaul in 2017 and 2019, respective­ly.

All of this new-materials research and innovative approaches to reducing car weight, though, are just reducing the fuel problem — not solving it. Most of these vehicles, even the Very Light Car, still rely on the internal-combustion engine and its baggage of bad state actors, finite capacity and deleteriou­s environmen­tal effects.

But there’s an alternativ­e vehicle with a weight problem that could really benefit from all of this: the electric car.

The heavy battery pack — the Nissan Leaf’s 660-pound battery accounts for about 20 percent of its weight — and subsequent hampering of battery efficiency is one of the most common complaints about plug-ins.

If carmakers can continue to dramatical­ly pare down the weight of cars, what started as a short-term fix for fuel efficiency just might end up offering some serious long-term benefits for fuel independen­ce.

 ?? LAND ROVER ?? Range Rover’s 2013 American Land Rover model has taken 700 pounds from what was previously a 5,500-pound SUV.
LAND ROVER Range Rover’s 2013 American Land Rover model has taken 700 pounds from what was previously a 5,500-pound SUV.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States