Archive for September, 2009

 

Sep 10

Survey Says 48% of US Consumers Interested in Purchasing a 40 Mile Range Plug-in Hybrid

 

Sometimes in our little world of GM-Volt.com it becomes hard to know how much consumer interest there really is in cars like the Volt.

Clearly there is interest, but how widespread is it, and more so how many people are actually considering buying one?

Pike research did a study to determine just these facts.

In a web-based prospective study of 1,041 respondents, it was determined that 48% of prospective US customers would be either “very” or “extremely” interested in buying a plug-in car with a 40 mile EV range, like the Volt.  This was assuming electricity cost was 75 cents per gallon equivalent, home recharging, additional around town chargers, and the right features and price.  Less than 20% had little or no interest.

The study also showed most buyers were willing to pay a premium for such a car.  49% said they would pay a 5 to 10% premium over a comparable gas car and 17% were willing to pay between 20% and 50% more.  One-third said they would not pay a premium. The average premium people were willing to pay was 12%.

Of those who would not consider buying a PHEV-40, 45% said they wanted to technology to be more proven and 33% said 40 miles was insufficient.  29% disliked the idea of plugging in and thought it would be expensive, 28% thought the cars would be unreliable, and 25% felt the cars would be of lower quality.

The study also found that 82% of respondents drive less than 40 miles per day, with an average of 27 miles, and that 85% would consider fuel efficiency as an important factor in choosing their next vehicle.

Source (GreenCarCongress)

 

Sep 09

Fisker Karma EREV Expected to Get 67 MPG Combined Fuel Efficiency

 

The Fisker Karma is the “other” extended range electric car deliveries of which are expected to begin in 2010. Only in Fisker’s case its May as opposed to November, and will be simultaneously global.

Although the Karma shares the same general engineering architecture as the Volt, the similarities end there. The car will have a 50 mile range in EV mode using 22 kwh of lithium-ion battery storage and after that a charge-sustaining mode with generated by a 260 hp GM Ecotec 2 liter engine.  Fisker has not announced the total capacity of the battery pack.

The dramatically-styled sports car has up to 405 horsepower, 959 lb-ft of torque, and can do 0 to 60 in under 6 seconds. It will retail for $87,500.

As the Volt 230 MPG announcement drew a lot of attention to it, Fisker too has decided to announced some numbers of its own.

Using the European format they claim the car will emit 83g CO2/km (less than the Prius’ 87 g CO2/km) and will have a fuel economy rating of 3.5L/100km.   This translates to 67.2 MPG.

The Karma is configured to operate in what they call stealth mode (EV mode) that the driver can activate via a steering wheel mounted switch, or in sports mode which uses the gas generator continuously.  The car’s default operation will be EV for the first 50 miles switching to generator after that.  The car will have less performance in stealth mode, topping out at 95MPH (down from 125 MPH) and doing 0 to 60 in 7 seconds.

According to Fisker spokesperson Russel Datz, the announced 67 mpg number is combined city and highway, and was arrived at using the SAE J1711 standard and the SAE J2841 standard which takes population behavior (utility factor) and nightly charging but not petroleum equivalence of electricity into account. Electric usage will be reported separately.

In the case of the Volt, the 230 MPG was determined by measuring the average driving behavior of a typical population who would be recharging nightly, and seeing how many city miles they would accumulate while burning one gallon of gas.  Highway and combined numbers were not released.

Datz said in city driving, the Karma would be rated around 150 MPG.  Similar to GM, he wouldn’t not disclose the MPG of the Karma in charge sustaining mode.

Per Fisker’s press release:

Fueling the Karma could cost just 0.02 euro/km ($0.03/mile), consuming as little as 21 kilowatt hours per 100km in its electric-only Stealth mode, according to SAE methodology. However, a real-world annual average would be closer to 0.05 euro/km ($0.07/mile) based on a mix of Stealth and Sport (gasoline) mode use. Actual economy and emission results will vary depending on individual driving habits and usage requirements.

Source (Fisker)

 

Sep 08

GM-Volt.com Speaks with Audi President Johan de Nysschen

 

Last week Audi North America President Johan de Nysschen was quoted as saying the Chevy Volt was a ”car for idiots.” This led to an explosion of web controversy.

Finding this comment hard to believe, and as an ardent Volt enthusiast, I sought the truth direct from the source, and had a half hour informal conversation with Mr. de Nysschen as an interchange of ideas.

Business Case Idiotic, Not People
De Nysschen underscored the debacle of his quote by noting the tragic irony that a senior executive two weeks before the launch of his own company’s electric car would be calling people who would by them idiots.

“I don’t think the Volt is a car for idiots,” he said. He claimed the headline was a journalist’s misinterpretation, and that his point was that the Volt was “an idiotic business case,” and not how he would refer to people.

“We might as well have been taking about the Tesla,” he said. “I am not an enemy of the (Volt) concept.” But he argues that we should not think of it as a magic bullet.

He thinks the business case for an electric car is idiotic because buyers “cannot amortize their incremental fixed investment in the cost of the car to the savings in fuel consumptions.”

And for those who are willing to supplement the cost through affluence for the sake of the environment, his opinion is that benefit is not clear either.

Questions CO2 Emissions Benefit of Electric Cars
de Nysschen said that he “cares very, very deeply about the planet, what we are doing to it and how our activities of today are shaping tomorrow.”
A prominent fallacy he says is that electric cars cause zero emissions, and said he was “astonished” such “misconceptions” are even held by people in positions of power who make legislative decisions and are close-minded to other options.

He is troubled that coal-fired power plants and related efficiency losses eventually release more CO2 than burning diesel, and referred to a CARB report that says electric power cars are second only to hydrogen powered cars in terms of the well to wheel emissions because of the way US gets its power. Though he did admit that it would be a different equation if electricity were created by renewable sources.

I asked him if he was aware of the EPRI-NRDC study from 2007 that showed CO2 emissions from EVs supplied by current powerplants would be less than if those cars were gas powered. He admitted he was “not familiar with that study.”

Agrees Energy Independence Important
As he had never mentioned it, I told him what I’ve noticed about Volt fans, and told him I have a list of 50,000 people, is a common theme of a desire for energy independence; that people don’t want energy from foreign sources.

He agreed that “that is a very worthwhile argument.”

But, “getting people to understand the benefits of clean diesel is important,” he said. He argued that if 30% of new cars sold in the US were to be clean diesel (the number right now is 50% in Europe), we would save as much oil annually as we import from Saudi Arabia, which is 1.5 billion barrels of oil per year.

Thinks Other Alternatives Should Come Before EVs
He says waiting to get to the “promise land” of EVs will lead to a lot of “dirt in the atmosphere” and instead feels we should move to complementary technologies sooner, including clean diesel, new generation gas engines, and biofuels.

He admitted diesel still comes from foreign sources and won’t make us independent, but less dependent. He argues it would do so because we would “need less of it (than gas) because diesel engines are more efficient.”

To get that diesel, he explains, when a barrel of oil is cracked it can be varied to produce more diesel than gasoline by tuning the distillation process. He also says diesel engines, being more efficient, produce 25% less CO2, have “beautiful power characteristics,” and are more economical.

He points out that the US has the world’s largest resources of natural gas, and argues that we could use it to power some of the power plants, though notes it’s more expensive than coal. He suggested the government should subsidize the use of natural gas in powerplants.

He also argues the natural gas could be used to produce clean diesel in a gas to liquid process, though admits it’s still a fossil fuel and not renewable.

He suggests another good option is using ethanol, not from corn which he called “an outrage”, but from new technologies creating it from waste material. He admits this wouldn’t result in vehicles which themselves do not produce emissions.

Electric Cars
He does believe electric cars “are the solution in the long-term,” but thinks we won’t get to that point for 20 years.

If we want EVs, he says, we face potentially “staggering” investments including cleaning up coal-powered plants and generating new capacity. Simply switching to EVs right now, he says, without cleaning up power generation is just “adding more pollution to the environment.”

Though he thinks the Volt’s business case is “troublesome” it doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t go down that road, he said. In fact, he actually supported it saying “how else would we learn and get experience and expertise (in EVs),” such that “the next generation is better.”

For that reason, in fact, he admitted “Audi too is working on electric cars and on the verge of making announcement about electric cars of their own.”

He believes in particular dense urban conditions such as the US West Coast, it makes sense to have cars that produce zero emissions where they are used. Here he says he sees “a massive role” for electric cars and “cars such as the Volt.”

The Chevy Volt

Doesn’t Work For Him
Asked why he thinks it will take 20 years for EVs to take hold he said one issue is the cost of the batteries, and the other is the limited amount of energy that can be stored in them.

I pointed out that the whole point of the Volt is it has the smallest battery possible that would allow most people to drive all of their daily needs without gas, thus minimizing battery cost and maximizing electrical driving.

He claimed the information Audi has is that the range available with these batteries is that if you are in heavy stop and go traffic with max 10 mph speed you could get “a tolerable amount of range.” But he said if you are doing highway driving 30 miles each way, as he does personally, it is his opinion that “he would have to switch to the gas motor long before he gets to work,” and that “even after he gets to work the infrastructure isn’t there to charge the battery.”

He would then have to drive the car home on gas too, in which case, he says ”the whole issue becomes a little bit moot, because if he’s driving mostly on the gas, it doesn’t work for him.” He admitted “it might well work” for other people with shorter commutes and different driving conditions.

He actually said “we should not summarily dismiss the (Volt) technology.” He admits “there is a role for it.” The people that buy the car will have to be “a particular subset of the total commuting public.”

Questions Value Proposition
I asked about why he thinks the Volt doesn’t offer what it should at $40,000.

To be fair he said, “I have never obviously driven a Volt” but admits “he has always looked at the car with great interest.” He even sat in it at an auto show, and said “it’s not exactly a Cadillac.”

He considers it very similar to the Saturn Aura which he thought was a “fine GM car,” and actually said he was “sad to see Saturn’s demise.” He then said the Volt would not be a better car but cost twice as much.

What you are getting, he says, is in his circumstance is half time zero emissions, zero fuel emissions. This is why he thinks if most people did the math they would have to find another reason why they would buy the Volt, it won’t be to save money.

I argued that the first generations of new technology always have to be subsidized by the well off who may have many different reasons for buying it.

“You are right,” he said, all new technology always cost more. He noted that was why luxury cars usually lead the way with groundbreaking technology.

I asked if he believed that that Chevy Volt design doesn’t match a high end car. “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder,” he said. “I don’t find it an unattractive car.”

“Its not a premium car feel,” he said. “But it’s got a premium car price.”

I argued it may not be a value equation but that there is the $7500 tax credit to bring it to $32,500.

He says this issue is his main point, whether this government expense is “the best way to clean up the environment,” and that there might be a better way to apply those tax credits to incentivize the utility companies to clean up the power stations.

Audis’ Electric Car Plans
I asked if Audi was planning a production electric car or an EREV and he did not actually provide an answer. He said what Audi and all car companies need to do is to continue to make gas and diesel engines for “many, many years in the future,” but they have to also produce hybrid cars and plug in electrics.

I asked if he thinks the idea of driving electrically with its smooth instant torque and driving pleasure was of value. He said he thinks it is a “very interesting driving experience” and admitted he has driven Audi’s own electric car prototypes and that “it’s very different.” He thinks it will be part of the engineering challenge to still “maintain an exhilarating driving experience and not seem like driving a golf cart.”

Asked specifically if he thought the Volt was a reasonable piece of the puzzle, he said “Oh absolutely, and even a required piece of the puzzle.”

For what its worth I told him I was the de facto number one Volt fan. He said “I certainly would never want to call you an idiot.”

Finally I asked him for information about Audi’s upcoming EV. He said he would “love to” tell me, but it would remove the fanfare from Audi’s announcement in Frankfurt, “so we’ll have to wait on that one.”

 

Sep 06

Study Shows Range Anxiety is Significant

 

Research suggests that most of the electrified cars that will be entering the North America market over the next several years will be pure battery electrics as opposed to plug-in hybrids like the Volt.

According to California based Aerovironment 60% of the 30 electric models known to be in the pipeline globally for 2012 will be pure EVs.

Companies like Nissan who have unveiled their upcoming LEAF EV believe pure EVs will be most readily adopted.  Anything other than a pure EV says Nissan’s director of product planning Mark Perry are “bridge technologies.”

GM, however, based on their experience with EV-1 believes range anxiety will be a significant barrier to adoption of EVs and is the fundamental reason they chose to develop the Voltec extended range architecture.

“We think, in the future, (battery-only) will have a place,” says Tony Posawatz, vehicle line director for the Chevrolet Volt EREV. “The experience of range anxiety is real.” Posawatz is actually credited with coining the term which is defined as the combination of limited range and fear of being stranded.

So who is right?

A study performed by Aerovironment provides some clues.

In 2007 Aerovironment installed a fast charging station in Tokyo to support a group of 93 mile range EVs that made up a test fleet operated by the Tokyo Electric Power Co.

They found that drivers very rarely ventured far from the charging station, and when the EVs were returned to the base all were generally at greater than 50% state of charge (SOC).

When a second further charging station was added, drivers were noted to immediately expand their driving radius.  Furthermore when EVs were returned to the base all were at <50% state of charge.

The drivers actually rarely used the distant charger, they just felt more comfortable having it around.

This alteration in behavior objectively demonstrates the reality of range anxiety.

“They mostly didn’t use the second charger,” said Kristen Helsel director-EV solutions at Aerovironment. “They mostly used the first charger. The availability of the second charger made them comfortable to drive (farther).”

This study indicates that a highly developed charging infrastructure will be needed for EVs to achieve widespread penetration. Aerovironment believes consumers will need more than a million public charging stations to support 1 million EVs, Obama’s goal for the US by 2015.

Source (Ward’s Auto, subscription required)

 

Sep 05

Op-Ed: Cash for Clunkers Ends in August and GM’s Monthly Woes Continue Unabated

 

On August 24th, the CARS program (more affectionately known as ‘Cash for Clunkers’) ended. The program was rolled out to generate sales to the distressed North American car industry (and the economy in general), while putting more efficient cars on the road.

Was it well received? Very much so. Who doesn’t like free money* after all? In fact, the initial funding of a billion dollars was exhausted in a week. A further two billion was quickly infused into the program, which allowed it to reach the one month mark before closing.

In total, the DoT reported that 690,114 deals went down, good for about 2.9 billion worth of stimulus. Many critics of the program feared that the program merely dragged forward future sales and really did not generate anywhere near that many ‘new’ sales and that a wake would be left in months following it.

The industry as a whole did indeed report growth…over 1% worth, with small car maker Hyundai naturally receiving the largest boost, up 47%. Also faring well were Ford (+17%), Honda (+10%) and Toyota (+6%). However, our own GM pulled up the rear, reporting year over year sales of 246,479, good for -20%. A look at the top selling vehicles in the CARS program gives a glimpse of part of the problem:

1. Toyota Corolla
2. Honda Civic
3. Toyota Camry
4. Ford Focus
5. Hyundai Elantra
6. Nissan Versa
7. Toyota Prius
8. Honda Accord
9. Honda Fit
10. Ford Escape

You will notice, there is not a GM vehicle to be found on that list. Of all sales generated, only 17% of the CFC deals went down at a GM dealership, and of those, a good bulk fell to ‘dead brand’ Pontiac.

Breaking down August’s -20% monthly sales number at GM, we find Pontiac reported a 23.3% sales increase, while survivors (and unlikely beneficiaries) of the CARS program Cadillac and Buick, were off 55% and 52% respectively. (GMC and Chevrolet were off 45% and 9%)

Looking ahead, GM has a couple big issues. For starters, Pontiac sold 30,000 odd cars last month, which leaves them with only about 15,000 left in new car inventory total before they slip quietly into automotive history. In fact, the ‘dead brands’ made up about 1 in of every 6 sales for GM last month. GM is so concerned about the orphaned customers of these brands, or ‘free agents’ if you will, they have recently set up a special task force to try and rustle those costumers back into the fold.

Even before the loss of the ‘dead brands’ themselves are felt on the monthly sales, GM’s market share has plunged from 24.7% to 19.5% in the last 12 months.

On top of the future loss of ‘free agents’ (about 15% of GM’s business YTD), they now face the vacuum the CARS program has left, which primarily benefited Japanese auto makers (and Pontiac clear outs).

What did newly promoted, vice president of rose colored glasses U.S. Sales, Mark LaNeve, have to say about all of this and GM’s diminishing share?

The Cash for Clunkers program was certainly a success, but our momentum continues to build on the strength of our new cars….our four core brands – Chevrolet, GMC, Buick and Cadillac – (which) are well positioned with new products to take advantage of the ongoing recovery in the market.” Mark continues to bat a thousand with optimism on the monthly sales results and forward looking statements.

Inside the same press release, the the usual paradox between reason and the words coming out of Mark LaNeve’s mouth presents itself. Mark announces that current production of cars for the quarter is set at 535,000 vehicles, and will be 655,000 for Q4 2009. Which of course means to any of us that are good at math, (and/or own a calculator), if GM sells every car they make, they will still average about 40,000 less than they sold this month.

Normally your supposed to wrap these articles up with some hope, so what is the answer? Is it the Voltec project(s) going to lead the charge at the ‘new’ GM and turn things around? It might. Unfortunately volume and profitability for this platform are a long way off, and there isn’t any new products that can fill the gap in the meantime…unless the new Equinox (and its legion of rebadges) are going to sell 1.5 million copies in 2010.

GM is going to need a lot more help from you and me (the taxpayer) to get there, so are we in? Or out? Do we even have a choice? Next up…the DoE loans.

 

Sep 04

Hyundai i10 Electric Car Unveiled

 

Add another to the growing list. It really looks like this idea of driving without gas is taking off.

Hyundai Motors of Korea has unveiled its new EV called the i10 ahead of its being shown at the Frankfurt Motor Show later this month. The company has apparently been working on the vehicle “for months.”

The i10 is another example of an electric urban or city vehicle, and is a diminutive 5-door 5-seat hatchback.

It has a 49 kw (66 hp) electric motor powered by a 16 kwh lithium-ion battery. The battery cells are provided by LG Chem. Driving range is 99 miles and top speed is 81 mph. 0 to 60 time is a rather leisurely 15 seconds.

The battery has an intrinsic liquid thermal management system, and the car will offer an 85% 15-minute quick charge option at 413 V.

Hyundai will begin low volume fleet leasing of the vehicle in Korea starting in 2010 and will go into full global production in 2012.

At this point, the battery for the vehicle remains prohibitively expensive, forcing Hyundai to offer these vehicles as lease-only for the foreseeable future. In fact, the price of the pack is greater than the cost of an entire conventional gas-powered i10.

It is being reported that the 16 kwh battery pack costs 10,000 euro (£8730) which translates to $14,260 ($890/kwh). This should give us a good idea of the Volt’s battery cost since it is the same size, uses the same supplier’s cells, and also has an intrinsic temperature management system.

It also illustrates how much range can be squeezed out of a pack this size in a lightweight pure EV. Energy consumption would allow 7.8 miles per kwh assuming a conventional 80% charge window in the pack. The Volt will achieve 5 miles per kwh.

This car also marks a departure from Hyundai’s previous plans to move to hydrogen fuel cells as their next step.

“We were going to do hybrid cars as a bridge before hydrogen technology really took off,” said an unnamed Hyundai source. “But we recognize there is a future now in electric technology.”

Source (Autocar)

 
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