Efficient Vehicles and
Sustainability Initiatives in the U.S. Auto Industry
U.S.
automakers are producing an ever increasing line-up of more efficient vehicles.
However, efficiency measures in the auto industry extend beyond the vehicles
they produce. American car companies must compete with more than 36 new hybrid
and electric vehicles (EVs) that have been or will be launched in 2013. Growing
demand for highly efficient vehicles has compelled almost every brand to get
into the EV market, which gives consumers an ever expanding list of vehicles to
choose from.
In
addition to expanded product lines, innovative sustainability measures are
being adopted by automakers. As explained by Green Car Reports,
the major automakers are doing more on the sustainability front when it comes
to their EV production lines. They are reducing their waste, increasing their
use of solar power while reducing their energy usage.
Automotive
brands are increasingly seeing value in greening their operations and products
as evidenced by Interbrand’s 2013 Best Global
Green Brands ranking, which counted four automotive brands in the
top five spots. The ranking evaluates companies based on their environmental
performance and the public’s perception of their green credentials.
A Mintel study indicated
that sales of hybrids and EVs were up 73 percent in 2012. They forecasted that
the number of hybrid and EVs will reach 535,000 units by the end of 2013, which
represents a 14 percent increase in sales over 2012. By 2017, Mintel predicts
that sales of hybrids and EVs will reach 850,000 units, representing five
percent of the total US car market.
According
to forecasts from Pike research, more
than 210,000 plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs) will be sold globally in 2013. By
the end of 2013, about 400,000 PEVs will be on the road globally. They further
predicted improved battery performance including greater reliability and charge
acceptance from regenerative braking.
Edmunds.com
projected that at least 43 new hybrids, PEVs, EVs, diesels and fuel cell
electric vehicles are planned for introduction in the U.S. by the 2015 model
year.
Aggressive
national fuel economy standards for model years 2012 to 2025 have helped push
automakers to provide more efficient vehicles. Declining price points from
companies like GM and Nissan are also a factor driving the rapid
adoption of EVs. The growth of charging station infrastructure is another
factor supporting growth.
A
late 2012 report released by Lux Research forecasts
that the market for electric vehicle charging stations will rise from
$140 million in 2012 to $1.15 billion by 2020. The market for charging
equipment is expected to grow from about 120,000 units in 2012 to 1.3 million
in 2020.
Here
is a review of some fuel efficient vehicles along with the sustainability
efforts of U.S. automakers General Motors, Ford and Tesla. These car companies
are producing more efficient vehicles as well as exploring some innovative
sustainability initiatives.
General Motors
Just
a couple of years after being on the brink of oblivion, GM was awarded the Top
Automotive Innovator as ranked by The Patent Board.
All together, GM was granted 1,123 U.S. patents in 2011. In July, Environmental Leader reported
that General Motors has partnered with Honda to develop fuel-cell vehicles and
infrastructure. This partnership makes sense given that the companies are first
and second on the Clean Energy Patent Growth
Index. When added together, GM and Honda have filed more than 1,200
fuel cell patents between 2002 and 2012.
GM
has also garnered a lot of experience with Project Driveway, a program which
was launched in 2007. Through the project, GM has amassed more than 3 million
miles of real-world driving experience with a fleet of 119 hydrogen-powered
vehicles, which is more than any other automaker.
As
reported by Environmental Leader,
General Motors plans to invest more than $331 million to produce more
fuel-efficient engines and transmissions. This includes the Ecotec engine which
offers improved fuel economy, better performance and reduced carbon dioxide
emissions. It also includes an eight-speed automatic transmission which will
assist in improved fuel economy and performance.
GM’s
investments came a month after GM CEO and chairman Dan Akerson announced the
company will save 12 billion gallons of fuel over the life of the vehicles it
builds between 2011 and 2017. The company has also committed to achieving a 20
percent reduction per vehicle in global CO2 footprint by 2020.
In
2012, Solar Energy Industries
Association said that GM uses more solar power than any other
automaker in the U.S. The company also ranks No. 13 of the top 20 solar-powered
companies in the U.S. In 2011, GM committed to doubling its
global solar output to 60 megawatts by 2014, and to increase
renewable energy use to 125MW by 2020.
In
2012, GM announced its plan to turn more than half of its manufacturing plants
into landfill-free facilities. With the aim of helping other companies do the
same, GM shared its waste reduction blueprint called “The Business Case for Zero
Waste”.
The
automaker recycles 90 percent of its worldwide manufacturing waste and has 102
landfill-free facilities. On its way to achieving a zero-waste status, the
company has managed to generate billions of dollars of revenue.
The
Volt is GM’s green flagship. This vehicle can operate up to 40 miles on its
electrical charge before switching to a gasoline powered engine. According to
the EPA, the Chevy Volt has a rating of 93 MPGe (MPGe, or miles per gallon
Equivalent is a measure of how far the car can travel electrically on battery
energy equivalent to that contained in 1 gallon of gasoline) while running
purely on electricity, and 37 MPG in so-called “charge-sustaining” mode.
The Volt is the most widely sold car in its class in the U.S.
Ford
In
2013, Ford Motor Co. announced that “eco-consciousness is no longer a niche
value; it’s a way of life.” In 2012, Ford announced plans to cut water use at its
European plants by 30 per cent by 2017, and to send 70 percent
less waste to landfills. In all, it is estimated that Ford will prevent 5.5
billion tons of waste from being dumped in landfill sites and save 1.3 billion
liters of water.
“This
plan represents our pledge to minimize Ford’s impact on the environment both
before and after our customers get behind the wheel,” said Stephen Odell, the
chairman and chief executive of Ford in Europe. “This goes hand in hand with
our commitment to develop the most fuel-efficient vehicles. Sustainability
makes just as much sense for Ford as a business as it does for the
environment.”
According
to Interbrand’s 2013 Best Global Green Brands ranking, Ford Motor Co. came in
second. Their Taurus has a 2.0-liter EcoBoost engine that gets 32 mpg, it’s the
vehicle which was EPA certified as the best-in-class large sedan for city
and highway fuel economy.
In
2012, the company launched five electrified vehicles: Focus Electric (MPGe
105), which went into production in 2011, C-MAX Hybrid (43 MPG), C-MAX Energi
plug-in hybrid (MPGe 100), the Fusion Hybrid (MPG 47) and the Fusion Energi
plug-in hybrid (MPGe 100).
In
2012, Ford announced some ambitious plans to increase
their EV production capacity. They said they want to double their
battery-testing capabilities by the end of this year. The company is investing
$135 million aimed at speeding up the development of its next generation of
electrified vehicles by at least 25 percent. Ford says it will reduce the costs
of its hybrid system by 30 percent over previous generations. Their goal is to
triple electrified vehicle production capacity by 2013 and offer more choices
to consumers.
Ford
is also getting involved with hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. At the beginning of
2013, the Detroit Free Press reported that Ford had joined Nissan and
Daimler to develop affordable fuel cell electric vehicles with
the goal of a 2017 launch.
Ford
has also adopted some innovative technological approaches to being more
environmentally friendly. Ford launched a $50,000 challenge for software
developers to create mobile or web-based apps to help consumers better
understand and improve their personal fuel-economy performance data.
Ford
is also exploring the ways in which cloud-based technology called the EVOS
concept car can improve upon and personalize vehicle performance. Ford is
researching the ways in which the Nokia Location Platform can optimize hybrid
powertrain efficiency by automatically regulating a car’s powertrain as it
travels.
Ford
is also behind an innovative program that addresses enegy use. At the Consumer
Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Ford announced the launch of MyEnergi Lifestyle.
This product helps people to use energy more efficiently, it also connects
plug-in vehicles and energy-smart appliances to the same database, to produce a
measure of overall household energy efficiency.
Another
intiative from Ford involves the expansion of its low solvent low VOC, 3-Wet paint process which
the company claims is reducing CO2 emissions between 15 and 25 percent at eight
of their plants. By the end of 2013, Ford will have implemented the technology
in 12 plants. The automaker says it will expand to additional facilities
worldwide over the next four years. The process saves electricity from the
blowers that circulate massive volumes of air through paint booths, and reduces
Ford’s use of natural gas needed to heat the air and ovens.
Ford
also reduced the average amount of water used to make each vehicle by 8.5 percent between
2011 and 2012, putting the company more than halfway toward its goal of using
an average of 4 cubic meters per vehicle globally by 2015.
Tesla
Tesla
Motors is the pioneering California-based electric car company which is
pursuing the goal of accelerating the world’s transition to sustainable
transport with a full range of increasingly affordable electric cars. Tesla
designs and manufactures EVs, as well as EV powertrain components for partners
such as Toyota and Mercedes.
In
addition to producing very efficient electric vehicles, a company press release
indicated that the Tesla Model S has achieved unparalleled safety
ratings. Independent testing by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA) has awarded the Tesla Model S a 5-star safety rating on
every subcategory without exception. This is a rare distinction as only one
percent of all cars get an across the board 5 star rating. The Model S
earned an unprecedented new combined record safety rating of 5.4 stars.
Tesla
Motors is an early adopter which has schooled the EV industry in the U.S. and
around the world. In 2006, Tesla was named a recipient of the Global Green USA
Product/Industrial Design Award for its work in developing the
Tesla Roadster.
Tesla
not only produces great electric vehicles they are also leading the way in
charging infrastructure. According to EV New Report, “The
Tesla station may become the de facto national energy plan for automobile
transportation.”
Tesla
has even incorporated a novel approach to sustainability into their production
facilities. Rather than build new facilities, Tesla Motors motors have
refurbished older factories. Overall, Tesla is widely recognized for its
excellent industry leading sustainability strategy.
The future of transportation is
electric
According
to Elon Musk, the CEO of both Tesla Motors and SpaceX, as well as the
Chairman of SolarCity, all forms of transportation are going to be electric.
“The
way I see it is that all transportation will go electric except for rockets,
ironically. All that is needed is someone to provide compelling electric
vehicles. That is something we’re doing at Tesla and that’s something I think
we’ll see the rest of the auto industry doing over time. I don’t think there is
such a thing as the electric vehicle market and the internal combustion market
— it’ll all go electric. It’s just a question of producing a compelling
product.”
Efficiency
is driving the market for this new generation of vehicles which are far more
efficient than gasoline and diesel power. Advances in electric and
hydrogen vehicles are ushering in a new era that will bring an end to the
environmentally destructive internal combustion engine.
More
sustainable practices, collaboration, technology and a new generation of
vehicles are reducing the footprint of the automotive industry.
Highly
efficient electric and hydrogen vehicles are combining with sustainable
automotive initiatives to forge a clean and green future in the U.S. and around
the world.
——————-
Richard Matthews is a consultant, eco-entrepreneur, green investor and author of numerous articles on sustainable positioning, eco-economics and enviro-politics. He is the owner of The Green Market Oracle, a leading sustainable business site and one of the Web’s most comprehensive resources on the business of the environment. Find The Green Market on Facebook and follow The Green Market’s twitter feed.
Richard Matthews is a consultant, eco-entrepreneur, green investor and author of numerous articles on sustainable positioning, eco-economics and enviro-politics. He is the owner of The Green Market Oracle, a leading sustainable business site and one of the Web’s most comprehensive resources on the business of the environment. Find The Green Market on Facebook and follow The Green Market’s twitter feed.