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Which Manufacturer Has the Greenest Vehicles?

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OKIsItJustMe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-10-07 04:17 PM
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Which Manufacturer Has the Greenest Vehicles?
http://www.healthnewsdigest.com/news/Environment_380/What_Manufacturer_Has_the_Greenest_Vehicles.shtml
From HealthNewsDigest.com

Which Manufacturer Has the Greenest Vehicles?

Nov 10, 2007 - 2:51:37 PM

(HealthNewsDigest.com) - No longer just the domain of the Japanese, greener cars are forthcoming from just about all of the major automakers. Toyota will improve on its hot-selling Prius by adding a plug so owners can juice up the batteries overnight and make it at least six miles before switching over to the car's gasoline-powered internal combustion engine. Toyota's president hinted that the plug-in hybrid, though still in the prototype stage, could attain double the fuel efficiency of the current Prius, which gets 46 miles per gallon.

While gas-electric hybrids are all the rage today, carmakers are also looking at other technologies, though none are on the market yet. Mitsubishi's new concept car, the iMiEV, runs for more than 120 miles exclusively on electricity stored in high-capacity lithium-ion batteries, and sports small electric motors on each of the front wheels, as well as another propelling both back wheels. Nissan is also getting into electrics with its Mixim concept car, which can reportedly go 155 miles on a single rapid-charge (20-40 minutes only). While Nissan says it has the technology to mass-produce the Mixim today, costs remain too high to make feasible from a marketplace perspective.

General Motors (GM) recently released a prototype of its futuristic Chevrolet Volt. This concept car is designed to go 40 miles on just its batteries, but it has an onboard gasoline-powered internal-combustion engine (not connected to the wheels) that can recharge it on the fly. GM hopes to make the Volt available to consumers within three years, but because of slow lithium-ion battery development, competitors wonder if such a timeline is too ambitious.

On the fuel-cell front, Honda already has a few dozen of its zero-emission hydrogen-powered 2007 FCX sedans on the road, and plans to lease 100 or so more of the sleeker 2008 model. Honda will only lease the vehicles to a few lucky individuals, since each FCX costs hundreds of thousands of dollars to produce.

General Motors is launching a "test" fleet of a 100 fuel-cell powered Chevrolet Equinox SUVs in select cities across the U.S. in 2008. The company will also set up hydrogen refueling stations in the same locales. The program will last two years and GM engineers hope to glean important information on how to improve its fuel cells to perform better at lower cost.

South Korea's Hyundai is also getting involved in fuel cells, launching a U.S. test fleet of some 300 of its Tucson SUVs. The company also recently unveiled its i-Blue concept car, a decidedly space-age vehicle that reportedly can cover 372 miles before needing to refuel. The company says that it will put fuel cells into mass production by 2015, if not sooner.

Automakers are responding to growing environmental concerns�and consumer demand by producing vehicles that our grandparents would not recognize as cars. The dream of futuristic vehicles may just yet become a reality.
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NNadir Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-10-07 09:55 PM
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1. There is not now and never will be, a "green" car. Got it?
No?

Um, the Swiss recently published an interesting paper in on the implications of a 2000 satt world, where 2000 watts is the average consumption of a human being on this planet.

You know what that means?

Let me help you here. That means that if you're an average American, you reduce your consumption to 1/6 of what it is now, and, if you'er an average African, you get to triple your consumption. If you're an average Chinese, you get a slight increase.

Any idea how much power 2000 watts is? It's about 3 horsepower.

I have yet to meet a single anti-nuke who was not an apologist for the car culture, NOT ONE.

No, in fact, your cute little hybrid is <em>not</em> "green." It's just slightly <em>less</em> offensive.

I have recently heard of a dinner involving a turket - dinner for 40, it is said - where a bunch of rich yuppie brats will drive to get "organic" locally grown foods, including two huge "organic" locally grown turkeys. Now, I guarantee you that the cars driving to this "organic" dinner on that one day, the energy expended to grow the "organic" food, will consume more energy in one day than an average Nigerian family will consume in an entire year.

Again, the idea that there is a "green" car is just yuppie posturing. It's meaningless.
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