Will Hybrids See a Resurgence?
By Tom Ripley for Driving Today
Toyota has been putting plug-in versions of its fabled Prius hybrid into the hands of the automotive press. Meanwhile, General Motors is close to introducing its Chevrolet Volt,
which also has plug-in capabilities. Does this signal that hybrid cars
will finally climb from the doldrums that have beset them since the
recession closed in?
Well,
maybe. Certainly when Toyota brings its plug-in version of the hybrid
car to market, it figures to generate some media buzz. And the Volt,
while not a hybrid in the traditional sense, has much in common with the
plug-in hybrid technology and should gain some serious coverage.
Times,
as they say, have changed. A couple of years back, the world was
gripped in an oil-availability crunch and an environmental weave of
emotion that vaulted hybrids to the top of the list as a gotta-have-it
technology. Gasoline prices had climbed to then-unheard-of levels, and
the Toyota Prius was hailed as not only the answer to the current issues
but a harbinger of an inexorable trend toward hybrids. Auto journalists
around the world applauded Toyota (and Honda with its first Insight and Civic hybrids)
for its pioneering hybrid efforts while chiding companies like General
Motors for lagging the field in this virally important area. Many said a
major switch to hybrids was inevitable.
But the last few years have been very unkind to hybrids. Ford Motor Co., General Motors and Nissan added hybrid models to their lineups, and Toyota and Honda supplemented their first hybrids with additional hybrid models. Several of those hybrids have already bitten the dust.
If you believed the pundits who said that hybrids were going to take
over the world, you were probably disappointed. Despite the addition of a
variety of Toyota and Lexus models plus hybrid versions of several Ford
Motor Co. vehicles, the Prius remains the predominant plug-in hybrid
model, and its sales have suffered recently in the face of a deepening recession and relatively low fuel prices. Honda’s second Insight has largely laid an egg.
Fuel
prices are creeping up again, and although interest in and sales of
hybrids increase in correlation with fuel price run-ups, hybrids are
still a long way from becoming a dominant technology. Despite the fact
they’ve been around for years now, they’re still a long way from even
reaching mainstream status.
So
will the addition of the plug-in feature enable hybrids to become a
dominant car type? The answer to that question seems like a firm no.
Even with the potential development of much less expensive batteries, a
plug-in hybrid drive system as we know it still involves more components
than a conventionally powered car, and more components equal more cost -- thousands of dollars of more cost.
The
ball, therefore, lands right in the vehicle marketers’ court. Can they
convince new-car buyers that the benefits of plug-in hybrids --
significantly increased fuel economy, lower emissions, decreased use of
fossil fuels and the ability to drive in electric-only mode for at least
some distance -- are worth the additional cost that seems inevitable
with the technology? It’s hard to believe that the answer will be yes,
despite what is likely to be laudatory media coverage.
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