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Automotive X-Prize recommends EPA adopt MGEe rating

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008 by admin

Now that the California Air Resources Board (CARB) has an agreement with General Motors regarding how to measure the fuel mileage of the 2011 Chevy Volt, our attention turns to the EPA, which now has to decide what official mileage rating will appear on the new car’s window sticker and how to determine what that number will be. The first recommendation comes from the Automotive X-Prize, the foundation of which will award $10 million from Progressive Insurance to the winner of its competition to design a production-viable car that people would want to drive that gets 100 MPGe or more.

What’s with that little ‘e’ after the familiar miles per gallon? Basically, the X-Prize crew wants to convert all units of energy to a figure that’s equivalent to the power from a gallon of gas. That way, a car’s powerplant – regardless of where it gets that energy from – earns a rating that can be easily compared with everything else. So, EPA, the ball’s in your court… still.

Automakers facing a 75 mpg CAFE rating by 2030?

Friday, April 18th, 2008 by admin

environment, environmental protec…, EnvironmentalProtec…, environmentalprotect…, epa, margo oge, MargoOge, sae, sae world congress, sae-congress, sae-world-congress, SaeWorldCongress

The Big Predictions for the Future have begun. This is the numbers game where eye-popping numerical targets start being thrown around before we’ve come anywhere close to achieving the eyebrow raising targets that are still 14 years away. According to Margo Oge at the EPA, the CAFE standard will need to jump to 75-MPG by the 2030s to meet greenhouse targets.

There is, somewhere, a “widely backed scientific-community proposal to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 50 to 80 percent by 2050 from 2000 levels.” Based on current realities, the EPA has reckoned that the fleet average for fuel economy would need to more than double from the 2020 target of 35 mpg in about 15 or so years in order to achieve even the minimum standard.

The EPA is looking at a variety of alternative fuel options as a way to make the plan work. Yet we have no idea whether this is being looked at as a serious long term plan, or whether grand pronouncements are being made because it’s the thing to do right now. While we freely admit that the world of cars could use some cleaning up, we do wonder… is any other industry going to be on the hook for reducing greenhouse gasses?
[Source: Detroit News]

Automakers facing a 75 mpg CAFE rating by 2030?

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008 by admin

environment, environmental protec…, EnvironmentalProtec…, environmentalprotect…, epa, margo oge, MargoOge, sae, sae world congress, sae-congress, sae-world-congress, SaeWorldCongress

The Big Predictions for the Future have begun. This is the numbers game where eye-popping numerical targets start being thrown around before we’ve come anywhere close to achieving the eyebrow raising targets that are still 14 years away. According to Margo Oge at the EPA, the CAFE standard will need to jump to 75-MPG by the 2030s to meet greenhouse targets.

There is, somewhere, a “widely backed scientific-community proposal to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 50 to 80 percent by 2050 from 2000 levels.” Based on current realities, the EPA has reckoned that the fleet average for fuel economy would need to more than double from the 2020 target of 35 mpg in about 15 or so years in order to achieve even the minimum standard.

The EPA is looking at a variety of alternative fuel options as a way to make the plan work. Yet we have no idea whether this is being looked at as a serious long term plan, or whether grand pronouncements are being made because it’s the thing to do right now. While we freely admit that the world of cars could use some cleaning up, we do wonder… is any other industry going to be on the hook for reducing greenhouse gasses?

[Source: Detroit News]