Why
aren't hybrid car owners showing more loyalty to hybrids?
Hybrid cars have come a long way since the first frumpy Toyota
Prius debuted in Japan almost 20 years ago.
The same can be said for electric
cars since GM rolled out its EV1 in the late 1990s, only to
backtrack, repossess and destroy all of them, infuriating its fans in the
process.
There are now dozens of hybrid models, and they enjoyed a surge
in sales when gasoline prices spiked in 2007 and again in 2012.
But
more recently, their sales overall have been on the decline. Meanwhile electric
vehicles are becoming more sophisticated, are improving their range and have
seen sales on the uptick while the
automakers have become more competitive in their advertising.
As expected, hybrid cars’ sluggish sales numbers have much to do with the fact that oil prices have been in a two-year slump while conventional gasoline engines keep getting cleaner and more fuel efficient.
When hybrids
started becoming more popular a decade ago, it was often assumed that when it
came time for a new upgrade, owners would stay loyal and trade in one hybrid
car for another.
But as an Edmunds survey has revealed, that is
increasingly not the case. In fact, more hybrid cars have been traded in for an
SUV than ever before. And that hybrid loyalty rate has fallen to below 50
percent for the first time ever.
Cheap gas, however, is not telling the entire story. Even SUVs,
most of which were monstrous fuel guzzlers a generation ago, have become far
more fuel efficient.
And the Edmunds report also indicates that many car buyers
still value fuel efficiency—but are not convinced the purchase of a hybrid car
is an absolute must.
After all, a recent University of Michigan survey shows
that newly sold cars have an efficiency rate of 25.3 miles per gallon (MPG):
compare that figure to 2007, when all new cars on average posted an average
20.8 MPG.
Going from a hybrid to a conventional internal combustion engine is
not a rejection of fuel efficiency. Rather, technological improvements have
given us more choices.
Read more at TriplePundit.