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Import More Cars, Not More Fuel?
December 1, 2005
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Survey: 9 Out of 10 Americans Want Access to Dozens of Car Models That Get High mpg Ratings ... But are not Sold in U.S.
A Built-in Market: 2.5 Million Americans Frustrated in Trying to Purchase Fuel-Efficient Cars; Why do Only 5 Car Models in U.S. get Combined Mileage of 40mpg or More, When 86 Car Models not Sold Here do That Well or Better?
Ever
heard of the Ford Fiesta that gets 45mpg in the city and 60mpg on the
highway? Not familiar with the Volkswagen Lupo with a combined
city/highway rating of 53.5mpg? Don't remember a car salesman ever
offering you a test drive in a GM Opel/Vauxhall Tigra that does better
than 60mpg on the open road? Never been passed by the sleek BMW 5 Series
Saloon that gets 50mpg on the highway? [See
DSA test drive of a Jaguar X-Type Diesel] You are far from
alone. According to new research by 40mpg.org/Civil Society Institute,
these are just a few of the 86 or more car models that get a combined
rating of 40mpg or better ... but are not sold in the U.S., where only
five cars are rated as highly by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA). Adding insult to injury: Most of these fuel-efficient
vehicles are either made by U.S. manufacturers or foreign car makers
with extensive U.S. sales operations. This
situation does not sit well with millions of frustrated American
consumers who face both high gas prices and often lengthy delays when
trying to buy more fuel-efficient vehicles in the U.S. Nine out of 10
Americans (88 percent) say that "U.S. consumers should be able to
get the best of the more fuel-efficient vehicles that already are
available in other countries," according to a new Opinion Research
Corporation (ORC) national opinion poll conducted for 40mpg.org (http://www.40mpg.org/)
and the nonprofit and nonpartisan Civil Society Institute. Not
only are 40mpg or better vehicles readily available in other nations,
but there is a considerable pent-up demand for such autos in the U.S.,
according to the 40mpg.org/CSI survey. More than 12 percent of Americans
-- an estimated 2.5 million consumers -- say that they "have faced
a delay in getting the fuel-efficient car [they] wanted or were
concerned enough about reports of delays not to proceed with purchasing
such a vehicle." The bottlenecks and shortages in the supplies of
more fuel-efficient vehicles in the U.S. is now so great that the number
of frustrated American consumers (12 percent) is actually slightly
bigger than those (11 percent) who have successfully made such a
purchase. Civil
Society Institute President Pam Solo said: "This survey and our
related research on the ready availability of more fuel-efficient
vehicles overseas shows that the emperor truly has no clothes when it
comes to a federal 40mpg fuel efficiency standard. Those who claim that
the technology doesn't exist are wrong. They are just as off base when
they say that consumers don't want these smaller, more fuel-efficient
cars. There is a reason why U.S. automakers are laying off people in the
tens of thousands and steadily losing ground to foreign competitors. The
industry is not listening to consumer demand. And the more consumers
make the connection between America's dependence on Middle Eastern oil,
the connection to global warming and so on, the more the pressure for
change will build. The availability of fuel-efficient vehicles in Europe
demonstrates clearly that consumer demand and national policies can make
an industry respond. Our survey shows the time for that kind of action
in the U.S. is now. We need to seriously think about taking immediate
emergency steps to get more of these more fuel-efficient cars into the
hands of the consumers who want them." 40mpg.org
spokesperson Ailis Aaron, co-editor of "The Ultimate Car Book
2001" and "The Used Car Book 2000-2001," said: "It
would be one thing if there were just a handful of more fuel-efficient
cars available outside the U.S., but the reality is that our research
turned up at least 129 car models for sale elsewhere at 35mpg or better
for combined city/highway purposes, including 86 rated at 40mpg or
better combined. The notion that foreign car buyers are somehow
different from U.S. car buyers is just another wrong assumption on the
part of Detroit. And you can't explain away the difference here by
safety standards or EPA rules. Most of the best recent safety
innovations came from Europe and Japan -- not the United States. And
when it comes to pollution, consider this fact: There are two vehicles
in the U.S. that get combined city/highway ratings of 50mpg or better
and both of them are hybrids. Outside of the U.S., there are 34 vehicles
that get 50mpg or better and 30 of them use 'clean diesel' technology
that the EPA says is more fuel efficient and results in less of the
pollutants linked to global warming." Other
key 40mpg.org/CSI survey findings: nearly four out of five Americans (79
percent) want to see higher federal fuel efficiency standards for
vehicles in order to cut Middle Eastern fuel use and to combat global
warming; more than four out of five Americans (82 percent) say the U.S.
"has not done enough" to conserve energy through such steps as
requiring higher federal fuel efficiency standards for vehicles; and
three out of five Americans (57 percent) think "a windfall profits
tax should be imposed" despite recent testimony before Congress by
oil company executives who denied any role in price gouging at the gas
pump. The CSI/40mpg survey found that alternative energy development is
favored by more than a two-to-one margin over "subsidies for winter
heating bills" (57 versus 26 percent) as the best use of oil
windfall profit tax revenues. Full
results from the new ORC survey are available online at http://www.40mpg.org/.
FOREIGN
CAR MILEAGE RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS In
analyzing more than a dozen sources of industry and public information
outside the United States about fuel efficient vehicles, 40mpg/CSI found
the following: *
At least 86 vehicles not for sale in the U.S. achieve combined
city/highway fuel efficiency of 40mpg or better. Of these, 65 percent
(51) are made by either U.S. auto manufacturers (e.g., Ford and GM) or
foreign manufacturers with substantial U.S. sales operations (e.g.,
Volkswagen, Nissan and Toyota). Some of the most fuel-efficient vehicles
are made by foreign manufacturers with little or no U.S. distribution
(e.g., PSA Peugeot Citreon, Fiat and Renault). Only five U.S. vehicles
are rated by the EPA as having 40mpg or higher combined fuel efficiency.
Overall, at least 129 vehicles not sold in the U.S. were found to
achieve combined fuel efficiency of 35 mpg or better. *
34 vehicles not for sale in the U.S. achieve combined city/highway fuel
efficiency of 50 mpg or higher. Only two U.S. vehicles are rated by the
EPA as having 50mpg or better combined fuel efficiency. *
The most fuel-efficient cars not sold in the U.S. are almost all powered
by "clean diesel," not hybrid technology. Of the 34 vehicles
not for sale in the U.S. achieving combined city/highway fuel efficiency
of 50 mpg or better, all but three use diesel power. (By contrast, the
US EPA has ratings for a total of only five diesel-powered vehicles of
any kind.) According to the EPA: "Diesel-powered vehicles typically
get 30-35 percent more miles per gallon than comparable vehicles powered
by gasoline. Diesel engines are inherently more fuel efficient, and
diesel fuel contains 10 percent more energy power per gallon than
gasoline. In addition, new advances in diesel engine technology have
improved performance, reduced engine noise and fuel odor, and decreased
emissions of harmful air pollutants. New low-sulfur diesel fuels
available beginning in 2006 will help reduce emissions from these
vehicles even more." *
Some fuel-efficient vehicles identified by 40mpg/CSI have both a diesel
and a gas model over 35mpg that aren't sold in U.S. In other cases, some
models have a gas version available in the U.S., but also offer a more
fuel efficient diesel version outside the U.S. Aaron
noted that CSI took a cautious approach in identifying both car models
not for sale in the U.S. and the consistent calculation of gas mileage,
in order to permit an apples-to-apples comparison with EPA data. Given
the tight standards for putting vehicles on the "not sold in the
U.S." roster, it is likely that there are a number of additional
vehicles that could be added to the list. Commenting
on the foreign fuel-efficient vehicle research, Pam Solo said: "The
benefits of making 40 miles per gallon the standard for all autos in the
United States are obvious to Americans: consumers save money; we reduce
our dangerous reliance on Middle Eastern oil, making us more secure in
the world; air pollution is reduced; and we can cut the U.S.
contribution to global warming by nearly a third. Greater fuel
efficiency makes sense, it is technologically possible, the benefits are
real and the challenges can be overcome." A
March 17, 2005 ORC survey commissioned by 40mpg.org and CSI found that
two out of three Americans think that it is patriotic to buy a
fuel-efficient vehicle that uses less gasoline and, therefore, requires
this country to import less oil from the Middle East. Only a third of
Americans disagreed with this statement, including 14 percent who did so
strongly.
ORC
SURVEY METHODOLOGY Survey
results are based on telephone interviews conducted among a sample of
1,030 adults (521 men and 509 women) aged 18 and over living in private
households in the continental United States. Interviewing was completed
by Opinion Research Corporation during the period of November 17-20,
2005. Completed interviews of the survey adults were weighted by four
variables: age, sex, geographic region, and race, to ensure reliable and
accurate representation of the total adult population. The margin of
error is plus or minus 3 percentage points for the complete sample of
1,030 adults. Smaller sub-groups will have larger error margins.
ABOUT
THE GROUPS Launched
in March 2005, the 40mpg.org Web site includes powerful features that
permit visitors to: determine how much they would save by getting 40
miles to the gallon; compare and contrast one vehicle's fuel-efficiency
ratings with those of others; monitor how individual members of Congress
weighed in on the most recent fuel-efficiency standard votes; contact
automakers to speak out in favor of more fuel-efficient vehicles; and
send a letter to the editor of a local newspaper urging the adoption of
a 40mpg fuel- efficiency standard. 40mpg.org is not affiliated in any
way with the maker or makers of any vehicles or fuel-efficiency
technology. The
nonprofit and nonpartisan Civil Society Institute is a think tank that
serves as a catalyst for change by creating problem- solving
interactions among people, and between communities, government and
business that can help to improve society. The 40mpg.org campaign is a
project of CSI. You can find CSI on the Web at http://www.civilsocietyinstitute.org/.
Source: Civil Society Institute/40mpg.org, Newton, MA.
CONTACT:
Ailis Aaron, +1-703-276-3265, or aaaron@hastingsgroup.com,
for 40mpg.org and Civil Society Institute Web sites: http://www.40mpg.org/ http://www.civilsocietyinstitute.org/
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