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Environment

Wake Up Detroit: The Time Has Come for Plug-in Hybrids

By Michael Brune, Sierra Club Books. Posted September 19, 2008.


Plug-ins are cleaner and cheaper. But a new coalition is not waiting for Detroit to take notice; they've got their own plan.
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The following is an excerpt from Coming Clean: Breaking America's Addiction to Oil and Coal by Michael Brune (Sierra Club Books, 2008).

It's said there are two ways of teaching someone to swim: give them lessons, or just throw them in the water. Professor Andrew Frank, from California's Central Valley, learned about automobiles the harder way.

"My father bought a car for me in 1948 for about $25," Frank recalls. "It was a '29 Nash, but it didn't run. My dad said, 'Well, son, you're kinda interested in cars. Why don't you fix it? Make it run, and it's yours.'"

Frank chuckled. "I was up for the challenge. I not only fixed it but turned it into a hot rod. Chopped the engine out, replaced it, took the top off, the whole thing."

Having first taught himself, Frank has been teaching others for more than forty years, first electrical engineering at the University of Wisconsin, then mechanical engineering at the University of California at Davis. He's also been watching -- and trying to work with -- the auto industry. "I remember that when Toyota first introduced the Prius in 1997, American carmakers were ecstatic. They said that if Toyota really pushed their hybrid program, they'd go out of business!" Frank laughed.

In April 2007, Toyota overtook General Motors as the world's largest, and most profitable, automaker. The next month, the company announced it had sold its one millionth hybrid vehicle.

Frank is working to promote the next generation of efficient vehicles, plug-in hybrids. Hybrid engines like those used in the Toyota Prius, Honda Civic, or Ford Escape use a combination of gas and electric power. Plug-in hybrids, on the other hand, use electric power for a range of thirty to sixty miles, and rely on a combination of gas and electric power for longer trips. Moreover, a study from the U.S. Department of Energy showed that plug-in hybrids reduced greenhouse gas emissions in forty-nine states across the country -- even in states that were heavily dependent on coal to generate power. States that use large amounts of hydroelectric power, such as Washington and Idaho, produce emission savings with plug-in hybrids of more than 80 percent. Only North Dakota, which relies upon coal that is particularly low in energy output, didn't enjoy any savings from plug-ins.

Chelsea Sexton, a former GM employee featured in Who Killed the Electric Car? who promoted the electric EV1 until it was discontinued, says that plug-in hybrids are "the best of both worlds" between hybrids and electric cars. "Maybe your first forty miles of the day are all electric," Sexton says. "Monday through Friday you may never use gasoline. But if you want to drive to Vegas on the weekend, you have gasoline in the tank as a backup. We call plug-in hybrids: electric cars with a safety net!"

A typical hybrid gets twice the gas mileage of your average gas-powered car, and plug-ins get about twice the mileage of a typical hybrid. Since 78 percent of all commuters live within twenty miles of their employer, plug-in hybrids would produce zero emissions and use not a single drop of gasoline for most trips. Most of the plug-in hybrids on the road today exceed a hundred miles per gallon. On longer voyages, to go camping or to visit grandma for the weekend, a combination of gas and electric power gives plug-in hybrids a range of four to five hundred miles. After that, drivers can just pull into any gas station, fill up, and go. Frank estimates that a plug-in vehicle would cost about $4,000 to $6,000 more than a conventional car. "That's what some people pay for a sunroof, leather seats and a fancy navigation system," he says.

Frank has been advancing plug-in hybrid automotive technology for years. He built his first plug-in hybrid in 1971, as part of a Department of Transportation contest on the future of urban driving. In the mid-1990s Frank and his UC-Davis students designed a series of improved plug-in hybrid vehicles that achieved far better mileage than anything Detroit was putting on the road. Frank offered the technology to major automakers, but everyone passed.


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See more stories tagged with: global warming, climate change, electric cars, hybrids, plug-in hybrids, tesla, electric vehicles

Michael Brune is the executive director of Rainforest Action Network.

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View:
The Chevrolet "Volt" is supposedly ahead of schedule for release
Posted by: fanny666 on Sep 19, 2008 11:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The production version has been created, now it's just a matter of getting it to production, which is supposedly happening. It's supposed to be available in less than 2 years.

And it's not a hybrid, it's a plug-in electric. Even better.

Chevrolet Volt

Chevrolet Volt

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Yep ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Sep 19, 2008 9:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the time has come for plug in hybrids AND battery electric cars ...

thanks to Alternet for the posting ...

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

after foot-dragging, fake starts, token research, and now loans to prop them up
Posted by: MuddPi on Sep 29, 2008 9:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
US automakers are finally ready to do what they could have, should have been doing for years, decades!!

In the time that computers have gone from the room-sized CRAY to holding its equivalent in the palm of your hand, the internal combustion engine has only managed to sprout cup holders, seat warmers, and DVD players!

How long have we realized that an energy crisis was looming in our future? How long have we possessed the common sense that we would need to evolve in our methods of transportation? How long has Detroit had to retool, rethink, get off their lazy asses and modernize their products instead of producing more and more needlessly over-powered and lumbering trucks for the masses who rarely if ever carry anything requiring such mass or travel over anything more challenging than a "bump" in a construction zone???

I had friends in the industry up there in the 90's and heard about & saw the internal schemes that one co. took part in to lobby against more stringent CAFE standards. I got a weekend tour of their Alternative R&D center, little more than a big room my friend characterized a joke but something they could point to when they claimed they were "doing something" to research alternatives. Then GM literally junked perfectly good electric cars, a move made famous in the movie.

SO when I hear the great news that Chevy is coming out with the "VOLT" (in 2 yrs. they say) and others in the domestic scene like Cadillac are producing "hybrids"
(have you seen the sexy new commercial about the "hybrid" Escalade? Are they serious? Do they think we were born yesterday? The thing now gets 12 mpg!! 12! Woop dee doo?)

And now they want us to pay them to re-tool?

I'm just [insert your favorite expletive or silly word] amazed.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Hybrid Car Design
Posted by: jimidee on Sep 30, 2008 4:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Very interesting article. I have studied the parallel hybrid cars available today and have decided that they are using an inefficient design. They have a dual drive system that employs both a gas engine and an electric motor connected to the drive train. For some of the time, like in town, the car runs on the electric motor. Then as conditions change, it will run on the gas engine.

This very complicated drive system is needlessly duplicative and requires that the alternate power source that is not in use at the time to be hauled around and thus reducing efficiency. These vehicles have a combined HP (electric plus the gas) of several times what is required to move the mass of the car at a given velocity.

A simpler and much more time tested system is employed in the series hybrid diesel locomotives, where a smaller diesel fuel engine turns a generator, which charges a smaller (than the plug in cars) series of batteries which powers a larger electric motor. This gives it a nearly unlimited range on a fuel that is readily available and uses technology that doesn't require a grad from MIT to work on it.

I do not pretend to be as smart as the Japanese engineers at Toyota or Honda, but it seems like they are creating an overly complex vehicle that could only be repaired/maintained at a factory authorized dealership. I hope that the US auto makers seriously consider the tried and true series hybrid locomotive that has been in operation for nearly a century, and not just follow the Japanese lead.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Great article
Posted by: Gerald on Sep 30, 2008 7:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The movie "Who killed the electric car" brings us to next question "Why...?"
I read somewhere that the first gas-electric hybrid ran on U.S. roads in 1912!
Even as we "run out of 'cheap' gas" oil's "special interests" wants to keep us hooked. It's not hard to figure out why.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Great article
Posted by: Gerald on Sep 30, 2008 7:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The movie "Who killed the electric car" brings us to next question "Why...?"
I read somewhere that the first gas-electric hybrid ran on U.S. roads in 1912!
Even as we "run out of 'cheap' gas" oil's "special interests" wants to keep us hooked. It's not hard to figure out why.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]