FuelEfficiency posts
FeedPosted Jun 23rd 2009 10:30AM by Mark Fightmaster (RSS feed)
Filed under: Ford Motor (F), Nissan Motors (NSANY)

The Energy Department is
set to lend money to
Ford (NYSE:
F), Tesla, and
Nissan (NASDAQ:
NSANY), according to the Associated Press. The report cites anonymous sources, with the official announcement set for today in Dearborn, Michigan.
Reportedly, Ford has asked to receive $5 billion in loans by 2011, although the sources were not certain on how much money the automaker would receive. Nissan's requested amount was undisclosed and Tesla has reportedly asked for $450 million. The loan program the automakers are trying to tap into was approved by Congress last year in order to help car companies and suppliers develop green vehicles and components (such as the advanced battery) and help automakers meet the new fuel-efficiency standards of 35 miles per gallon by 2020.
Continue reading Ford, Nissan and Tesla may receive U.S. auto loans
Posted Jun 11th 2009 4:30PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Politics

The 'cash for-clunkers' cash payment is now likely to receive Congressional approval, something yours truly didn't think would occur six months ago.
Dueling versions of the bill that would grant a voucher worth $3,500-$4,500 to consumers who trade-in their gas-guzzling cars and trucks for more fuel-efficient vehicles are winding themselves through Congress. The House version passed 298-119,
Bloomberg News reported. A vote on the Senate version is expected soon. In a nutshell, car purchases get $4,500 for a vehicle that improves mileage by at least 10 miles per gallon, $3,500 if the new vehicle ups mileage by at least four miles per gallon.
Continue reading Will Congress' 'cash for clunkers' boost U.S. GDP?
Posted Sep 16th 2008 10:58AM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and services, General Motors (GM)
General Motors Corp. (NYSE:
GM) has said its new global small car that will compete with Japanese automakers like
Honda Motor Ltd. (NYSE:
HMC) and
Toyota Motor Co. (NYSE:
TM) will be able to
sell for more than the competition, as it will have better gas mileage than small cars do now. The new Chevrolet Cruze was announced Monday as GM prepared to celebrate its 100th anniversary, and at a precarious time for the storied automaker.
The new Cruze, set to be unveiled for sale in the summer of 2010, will be a much larger car than what it replaces -- the Chevy Cobalt -- but will have up to 40 miles per gallon, beating almost all the fuel efficiency figures of cars much smaller like the Honda Civic and Toyota Corolla. Therefore, GM believes it will be able to charge more for the Cruze. It's a risky but calculated move made necessary as the profit margins from SUVs and large trucks are evaporating as consumers move away from those products and into smaller vehicles. At some point, automakers will have to up the prices on smaller and mid-size vehicles to ensure they remain profitable. That is, unless gas prices fall back down and the more profitable, gas-guzzling SUVs fall back into style.
It's no secret that GM needs to make more money per vehicle than its Japanese competition, and GM general manager Ep Peper said as much yesterday. Peper pointed out that more features in newer cars will justify higher prices, but consumers won't really care or be swayed by the argument. When prices rise, everyone gripes. When they fall, shopping sprees happen. Note to GM: consumers are very fickle -- get used to it.
Posted Jul 7th 2008 2:22PM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, Products and services, Consumer experience, Competitive strategy, Ford Motor (F), Oil

With gasoline prices sitting at record highs, and the auto industry struggling to deal with the situation, there is a new shift in the design of cars. Historically, when you bought a smaller engine car, that engine came in a vehicle that had far less in the way of comfort and amenities...
well, that is changing.
Think back a few years. You went to your local auto lot to pick up a new car, and your first choice was what size engine you wanted, the heavy duty 8-cylinder, 6, or 4-cylinder car? Suppose you decided the 8-cylinder was for you, can you picture the car that supported this engine? Typically these cars had all the bells and whistles you could imagine: the sunroof, the leather seating, fancy radios, power windows, etc. Basically, the bigger the engine, the better the "packaging" that it came along with.
Now, picture the 4-cylinder car from the past. Not much to picture here. Power windows? Doubtful. Yes, the 4-cylinder cars of the past were typically your bare bones vehicle with few fewer amenities than those coming with the 8-cylinder alternatives. If you were lucky, you would at least get some power steering in the car, but that was not always the case either.
Continue reading Automakers see potential in cars with smaller engines, but more amenities
Posted May 8th 2008 10:44AM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and services, Ford Motor (F), General Motors (GM), Toyota Motor Corp. (TM)

Gasoline prices continue to increase along with crude prices, and the latter seem to find a new record every single day. Wasn't it just a few months ago that the media was going crazy about oil reaching the $100 per barrel mark? It hit $122 this week. Now, that's not a year later; that's less than half a year later. It's not surprising then that automakers with an inflexible SUV-selling strategy are getting pummeled, while automakers with a decent offering of gas-efficient vehicles are seeing product mix changes in retail sales.
Ford Motor Co. (NYSE:
F), which
showed a surprising profit in its most recent quarter, said that it plans to really
up the presence of gas-efficient six-speed transmissions by the end of 2009, and wants to have these transmissions in 98% of its North American vehicles by 2012. If Ford follows through with this commitment, it'll be a game-changer for the industry. And, it will force
General Motors Corp. (NYSE:
GM) to do the same thing. Ford stated that the newer 6-speed automatics will get 4% to 6% better gas mileage than the standard 4-speed and 5-speed automatic transmissions.
GM is not sitting idly by at the same time, though. It debuted a 6-speed automatic transmission in the popular 2008 Chevy Malibu, which it is pitting as a strong competitor to market leaders
Honda Motor (NYSE:
HMC) Accord and
Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE:
TM) Camry. Will the new trend in the consumer vehicle market be smaller 4-cylinder engines with advanced, fuel-efficient 6-speed automatic transmissions? You can count on it until oil prices fall to $50 a barrel. And, that'll be when pigs fly.
Posted Jun 22nd 2007 11:01AM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and services, Law, Ford Motor (F), General Motors (GM)
With the
passage of a new energy bill that requires a drastic increase in the average fuel efficiency of automobiles sold in the U.S., automakers are feeling a bit steamed right now. Mandating significant increases in gas efficiency for vehicles even within a little more than a decade is an enormous task for automakers. New designs, manufacturing processes and probably a hundred more things become necessary.
At the same time, the financial pressure the big three automakers are under make large changes like this hard to swallow. But this doesn't only affect domestic manufacturers ---- all automakers selling vehicles in the U.S. have to conform. The trick is that other automakers like Honda and Toyota started reacting to the market's need for more fuel-efficient cars (and the marketing of them) long before domestic automakers did. Now, those automakers are sitting in a much prettier setting than
General Motors (NYSE:
GM) or the
Ford Motor Co.(NYSE:
F). It's estimated that the fuel economy changes mandated for the future will cost GM $40 billion alone. Yikes.
The just-passed energy
bill required a fuel economy increase of about 40% (to 35 miles per gallon) by 2020 -- just over 12-and-a-half years from now. Is that even technically possible? Most global automakers, who are united on this front (with the curious absence of Nissan), say that this expectation is way out of whack. The bill was passed late last night in the U.S. Senate by a vote of 65-27, and a vote by the U.S. House is probably coming next week. President Bush also added his opinion, stating that Congress must be "realistic" about this kind of legislation, and that he opposes much of it (while still supporting alternative methods like ethanol use).
Posted Jun 6th 2007 2:43PM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and services, Competitive strategy, Daimler (DAI), Ford Motor (F), General Motors (GM), Toyota Motor Corp. (TM), Middle East, IAC/InterActiveCorp (IACI), Economic data, Politics, Oil
General Motors Corp. (NYSE:
GM),
Ford Motor Co. (NYSE:
F),
DaimlerChrysler AG (NYSE:
DCX) and the United Auto Workers just can't stop complaining about new, tougher fuel-efficiency standards that the U.S. Congress likely will pass.
The companies and union are taking their case to Capital Hill today at a private luncheon with leaders of the U.S. Senate to convince them to reconsider an overhaul of Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE) standards, according to the Associated Press.
Let's hope that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reed has the guts to tell them to pound sand. The public is fed up with high gas prices and the growing problem caused by global warming. Even GM Chief Executive Rick Wagoner has acknowleged this reality, though the AP quotes him cryptically saying "let's make sure that we also fix the real problems while we're doing that."
Continue reading Auto industry CAFE whining falling on deaf ears