Quote:
Originally Posted by finman
I think sales numbers tell the real story...and they will continue to tell the real story.
People want real cars with real efficiency and real emissions reductions. so far, the volt ain't it. Other car companies are selling it. today.
Sure, some car companies produce low (dismally low!) MPG trucks and SUVs, and also produce a stellar group of hybrids.
Others produce mildly (VERY mildly!) better MPG trucks and SUVs and NO stellar hybrids.
Again, look at sales numbers. I think that says all that needs to be said. Green sales versus green ads. Which do you think will truly help the average person "drive green" today?
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I don't disagree on any point. In fact you are 100% correct. If you want to "drive green" in a "stellar hybrid" today the Japanese vehicles are almost the only way to go.
However based on the behavior of the people I work with, Japanese hybrids were before their time. Everyone talked about hybrids, but no one actually bought one. With gas under $2.00 a gallon almost no one cared about fuel economy (Green-Hybrid members excepted, of course).
Historically the US has been the inventor, investing tons of money in development only to have cheep Asian knockoffs undercut American made products (sorry about the broad brush strokes). This time it was Japan doing all the legwork on hybrids. GM might have done a smart thing by waiting.
Demand for hybrid cars is highly dependent on fuel prices. If gas was $1.50 a gallon you would have trouble giving an older used hybrid with potential battery pack issues away. The landscape changes quite a bit with gas at $3.50 a gallon, all of a sudden hybrids are worth their weight in gold.