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New Emission Standards Will Transform U.S. Auto Fleet
By Tom Krisher, AP Auto Writer
Manufacturing.Net - May 20, 2009

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DETROIT (AP) -- Some soccer moms will have to give up hulking SUVs. Carpenters will still haul materials around in pickup trucks, but they will cost more. Nearly everybody else will drive smaller cars, and more of them will run on electricity. The higher mileage and emissions standards set by the Obama administration on Tuesday, which begin to take effect in 2012 and are to be achieved by 2016, will transform the American car and truck fleet.

The new rules would bring new cars and trucks sold in the United States to an average of 35.5 miles per gallon, about 10 mpg more than today's standards. Passenger cars will be required to get 39 mpg, light trucks 30 mpg.

That means cars and trucks on American roads will have to become smaller, lighter and more efficient.

Eric Fedewa, vice president of global powertrain forecasting for the auto consulting firm CSM Worldwide in Northville, Mich., said the changes will make pickup trucks so much more expensive that they will be used almost exclusively for work.

And instead of a minivan or SUV, more parents will haul their families in much smaller vehicles with three rows of seats -- something more like the Mazda 5 small van, he said. The Mazda 5 gets about 28 mpg on the highway.

"I think what you'll see is a lot more creativity in interior packaging," Fedewa said. "You'll get more rows of seats where you traditionally had cargo space."

Already on Tuesday, some drivers were skeptical. Dixie Bishop, who runs a plumbing business in San Antonio that uses vans, worries the new requirements will drive up her costs at a time when customers are cutting back on repairs.

"Are they going to take my horsepower down?" she asked. "I have to be able to carry old water heaters and toilets. It's not beneficial for me to haul one water heater at a time. We need the power to pull these heavy items."

The changes will start with smaller cars and trucks, and improvements to the internal combustion engine, Fedewa said. Automakers also already working on new technology, including direct fuel injection and high compression of the air-fuel mixture, that will make cars and trucks more efficient.

Car companies are rewiring vehicles so components such as air conditioners and power steering pumps are powered by electricity rather than by the engine, saving fuel.

And they're developing computer-controlled transmissions with six or more gears, adding efficiency, and rolling out more gas-electric hybrids -- among the few cars sold today that meet the 2016 standards.

Of course, developing the technology will cost money -- billions of dollars -- and automakers will pass that on to their customers.

The Obama administration says the changes mean the average vehicle would cost about $1,300 more, although some private analysts say the increase will be much heftier. The administration says gas savings will make up the difference in about three years.

Automakers have said they need stable, relatively high gasoline prices to create a market for electric vehicles. General Motors fears rolling out its rechargeable Chevrolet Volt next year with gas at $2 per gallon.

American consumers have already shown their car-buying habits can change rapidly depending on gas prices. When fuel cost $4 a gallon last summer, people flocked to smaller cars. Gas is much cheaper now, and sales of hybrids have plummeted.

"The U.S. consumer has consistently chosen performance over fuel economy given the relatively low cost of fuel," David Leiker, senior automotive analyst for Robert W. Baird & Co. in Milwaukee, wrote in a note to investors.

The Volt is designed to run 40 miles on battery power when it is fully charged. After that, a small internal combustion engine kicks in to generate electricity and keep the car going. Other automakers are working on similar systems.

But the Volt is expected to sell for $35,000 to $40,000, and buyers may be unwilling to pay that much for a sedan, even if tax credits help ease the burden, unless gas prices soar.

Rechargeable electric vehicles, which under government calculations could get 100 mpg or more, will help automakers meet the standards and offset sales of larger, less-efficient models.

Under Obama's plan, the sale of of electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids could also generate "super credits" that would count as more than one vehicle when an automaker determines its average fuel economy and emissions figures.

The new rules cause manufacturers "to accelerate their technology plans, probably a little more aggressively than they originally thought," said Tony Posawatz, who heads development of the Volt's technology. "For us, we feel comfortable that we've got choices."

Just a few years ago, GM and other auto executives were doubtful they could meet even less stringent standards, but Posawatz said the technology has changed since then, especially with new lithium-ion batteries.

GM also is looking at electric trucks, which may bring them even closer to the goals, he said.

Earlier this year, Toyota said it planned to launch as many as 10 new hybrid models worldwide by early 2010, and it plans to bring a new version of the Prius to the U.S. in the coming weeks. Honda's new Insight hybrid is already on sale in the U.S. Mazda, meanwhile, has said it plans to focus less on hybrid vehicles and more on improvements to its basic internal combustion engine.

AP Auto Writers Kimberly S. Johnson and Dan Strumpf in New York, AP Energy Writer John Porretto in Houston, and Associated Press Writer Ken Thomas in Washington contributed to this report.


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The Gov't Knows Better Than You  5/20/2009 12:18:00 PM
Get used to it. This new administration knows how you should live your life better than you do. Submit now to the tyranny of the majority. You have free choice of gov't approved vehicles. Your desires and needs don't matter anymore. The industry can only offer you what is approved by the gov't. Maybe I'm wrong but only time will tell. This whole mess is beginning to remind me of 1976 to 1980. Anybody remember Joan Claybrook?
So who wants to buy my camper?  5/20/2009 12:26:00 PM
Great, I'm going to get priced out of being able to buy my next truck to pull my camper. Trucks are needed for more than people who use them for work everyday! And I still need a large cab for my family. Or should I plan to pull the camper with smaller truck and tell the rest of my family to get to our destination in another vehicle. Now that will help reduce emissions! What a joke. Obama doesn't understand the marketplace. Yes, please improve my mileage, but don't make it impossible for me to be able to afford what we love to do.
Of Course Gas Prices Will Soar  5/20/2009 12:27:00 PM
Just like Cigarettes a perfectly legal product, Governments will tax the hell out of gasoline driving the cost up and making alternatives look "reasonable." So much for choice. When is the American public going to pull their heads out of dark places and realize the government is rapidly increasing its hold on our private lives. Soon we will have no liberties. By the way Volkswagon made a 36 horsepower engine that went into their microbus that hauled 7 passengers and got over 30 miles to the gallon 45 years ago. The problem with it was you couldn't do over 60 miles per hour and in a strong windstorm it would blow you all over the road. That's why they increased the horsepower and made it bigger in subsequent years. And yes it was used for plumbing when things were heavy!
The real cost?  5/20/2009 12:45:00 PM
$1300 extra when you buy. What about the extra cost of insurance for the lighter cars? Not to mention the extra loss of life with the lighter cars. Remember the old VW bug joke - Saves money by double duty. In the event of a major crash it can be used as a coffin - can't cut them out anyway! Hopefully new technology will allow us to have it both ways. We sure don't need to send any more money to the middle east. The new US owned car companies will no doubt build just what we need?
New Emission Standards Will Transform U.S. Auto Fleet   5/20/2009 12:51:00 PM
CAFE-style standards don't work. A gasoline tax is more direct, efficient and will at least allow the consumer a choice from the vehicles they can afford.
George Orwell's 1984?  5/20/2009 12:53:00 PM
When I was in high school I read George Orwell's 1984. The storyline seemed wacky to me at the time, but here we are, Big Brother has stuck his big unwelcome nose into just about every facet of our lives. dictating what is government approved and ok for us to do (i.e. EPA). Now we all know that the crooked politicians in Washington know more about building cars than Engineers. Next up, computerized medical records, chip implants and 80% income tax rates. How long are we going to put up with this?
Greener for the better!  5/20/2009 1:08:00 PM
To me these new standards should have happened years ago! It shouldn't take soaring fuel prices for higher Emissions standards to be set for automakers. Hummers, Tahoe, Subburbans and others are totally unecessary! Trucks were designed for work not play and having a huge 45ft trailer is a luxury not a hobby or neccessity. I for one would gladdly accept alternative fuels and hybrids for not only my car but my home. We have to remember that our children and our Grandchildren will have to live with what we do. Hybrids that get 50mpg. Electric vehicles made in the US that get 300 miles per charge www.teslamotors.com This is our future, this is what needs to happen. I can see more mass transportation coming from trains again as they have cleaner burning engines now. Trucks would still be used for localized distribution. It's not the government trying to control what you drive or how but more the government challanging our failing US automakes to do better, raise the bar and actually compete with forgein companies who have thus far kick out butt! It's time to take it back to basics and get rid of the stuff we don't really need just for convience or status. High gas prices or not my next car is going to be a hybrid and in my opinion the sooner we all start trying to decrease our forgien oil dependency the better.
Why does gas mileage cost more?  5/20/2009 1:30:00 PM
My 1993 Ford Escort gets 42 mpg on the freeway. The technology is simple and cheap. It doesn't zoom as fast as the modern cars, but who needs that? I'm not too keen on buying some complicated claptrap with a huge battery array just to get a small increase in fuel mileage and a little bit better performance.
Can you see the tax?   5/20/2009 2:11:00 PM
The solution for the people needing trucks is the governments favorite scheme, a gas guzzler tax. Perhaps 1000 dollars per mpg below 30... of course, people hiring the workers will pay the tax through higher bills (and higher electric bills since the electric company needs to drive trucks, and roads since construction workers for roads need to haul equipment, and....).
Greener for the better - hah, hah, hah!!!  5/20/2009 2:24:00 PM
Obviously the author of the comment "Greener for the better" has gobbled down vast quantities of "the kool-aid".
You're all right  5/20/2009 3:21:00 PM
All you guys are right. Don't bother forcing car companies to raise the MPG of cars and trucks. They'll do it on their own. But wait...they were raising the MPG in the late 70s and early 80s until the rules were relaxed. But since car companies only build what the people want, that must mean that the people don't want fuel efficient cars. So the fact that the foreign car companies that have more fuel efficient cars have taken away Detroit's market share is just a myth. Unless someone forces the car companies to look beyond the next 3-6 months, they will be gone in the next decade.
greener the insane  5/20/2009 3:44:00 PM
I can't put into words how insane the comments by "greener the for the better" are. He obviously lives in an urban area and never visits a home improvement store etc. A great deal of us live in rural areas and need trucks for hauling, snow plowing and or just getting through the snow. I can't agree more about getting away from foreign oil. However we are the only country in the world that denies ourselves our own resources. This latest insanity will cost us jobs, and more $$$$$$$ than we can even imagine. Depending on what you study you look at we might possibly have years of oil within our own borders if we simply go after it. (Anwar, oil shale etc. etc.)I could care less if there are caribou in Alaska, me or my grandchildren or great granchildren will never see thm anyway. Besides, any sane person knows that todays technology is safe. For God's sake why don't we use our resources instead of turning everything in side out! Get smart people all this talk of global warming and green house gasses is just another way of taxing us to death! Just wait until the "cap & trade" rules come into play. No one will be able to pay their energy bills nor will there be any industry left in the U.S. King Hussein has spoken and the best years of this once GREAT country are behind us!!!
Change is hard  5/20/2009 3:52:00 PM
I know, change is hard for everyone but think about it, we will reduce our dependence in oil from countries who hate us and our children will grow up in a healthier environment -- that's worth the change, don't you think?
change is hard??????????????  5/20/2009 5:04:00 PM
The point is we don't have to change, just simply use our own resouces while we develop new alternatives. Why is that so difficult for greenies to understand??? The change BHO is making will cost billions of $$$$$ and is not necessary??? Why are we allowing this insanity??? This is all just another way of taxing us to death. I can't believe that the BHO's kool aid drinkers voted for this complete upheaval of every American's way of life????
Greener for the better (furthermore)   5/21/2009 3:45:00 PM
Obviously some can't see the future and only want to live in the now. Fine, kill yourselves with your "Kool-aid" I prefer beer. I live in the city, I go to home improvement stores all the time and guess what? I can rent a truck from them for 30 bucks if I need it. Oh, and guess what else, I grew up in a rural area, I'm no city boy. Trucks have thier place and they have benefits for snow plowing etc... but why does everyone need a truck or SUV? Furthermore why does your truck or SUV for um, "rural environments or home improvement" need luxury that rivals the top of the line lexus. People with this mentallity are like locust or cockroaches devouring every resource we have until it's gone, for what? Why not use technology, why not strive to make improvements, why not try to change just a bit. Fine you don't care about carabou, neither do I. Want the concrete jungle or a farmhouse I don't care either. I'm looking at what comes out of my pocket at the pump not just today but 6 months ago and probably 6 months from now. If we can make things better why not try? So your truck costs more, get rid of the XM radio, leather interior, seat warmers, satelite navigation and power windows bet the price looks a lot better then.


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