• Interviews
  • Business Trends
  • Sales
Dealership News
  • Trending
  • Job Board
  • Podcast
  • Dealership of the Week
  • Interviews
  • Business Trends
  • Sales
Dealership News
  • Trending
  • Job Board
  • Podcast
  • Dealership of the Week
Dealership News
Dealership News
  • Interviews
  • Business Trends
  • Sales
Copyright 2021 - All Right Reserved
Home » 7 Things We Learned in 9 Years
Technology

7 Things We Learned in 9 Years

by Kelly Kleinman August 3, 2018
written by Kelly Kleinman August 3, 2018 0 comments
7 Things We Learned in 9 Years
0

By February 2014, Green Car Reports had published about 9,800 news articles. The number is now up to more than 16,800. Much has changed since then, however. We’ve broken down our thoughts into seven lessons, although regular readers will know that the site has covered each of these themes at some length over the years.

(1) A “green car” is now a battery-electric vehicle. Full stop. Four years ago, it might have been a plug-in hybrid or even the most efficient conventional hybrid, but no longer.

(2) China will lead the world. Perhaps the single most important story we’ve covered over that time was China’s announcement last September that it would set a year—still TBD—by which sales of new vehicles with combustion engines would be banned altogether.

China is the world’s largest car market, at roughly 30 million versus a U.S. peak of 17.5 million. It’s a growth market; the U.S. is not, nor is Europe. What happens in China will have strong ripples in the rest of the world. BYD e6 electric taxi in service in Shenzhen, China. China’s government-backed push to zero-emission vehicles will proceed rapidly. The country modeled its zero-emission vehicle mandate on California’s—and then supercharged it, to a pace even the Golden State can only dream of.

That mandate plus China’s plans to ban new vehicles with engines at some point, even without a known date, will ensure that battery-electric vehicles become a substantial portion of the world’s production within 10 years. The pace of that change outside China remains uncertain, and will require far more consumer demand in Europe and especially North America than we’ve seen so far.

(3) With the continued slow emergence of Teslas, Chevy Bolt EVs and Nissan Leafs, plus future all-electric models configured as desirable crossover utility vehicles, consumers will start to realize that electric cars are simply better cars. At some point.

They’re quieter, smoother, calmer, cheaper per mile, and dispense entirely with visits to the gas station (which many people turn out to dislike more than the rest of us may have realized).

(4) Despite the phenomenon of Tesla, North America is still likely to lag the rest of the world in mass adoption of battery-electric cars.

That’s due to many factors. They include North American drivers’ longer average travel distances, historically cheap gas leading to larger vehicles—full-size pickups and SUVs are seen virtually nowhere else in the world—enormous areas of dispersed low-density suburbia and exurbia, energy policy in the U.S. that is incoherent at best, stubborn climate-science denial, and an utter lack of viable mass transit in most of the U.S. and Canada.

(5) Battery electric cars are already cleaner than the average new vehicle sold in the U.S. today, and the numbers are equal in many other large markets. They will get cleaner yet as more renewable energy comes online and the world’s electric grids slowly decarbonize.

(6) Hydrogen fuel-cell passenger cars show no more signs of long-term viability on a global scale than they did in 2009. Nor do their carbon emissions favor them. Hydrogen could, however, become a viable zero-emission fuel for heavy commercial vehicles, and over the long term, possibly even airplanes. (This one is endlessly debatable, but we’re not going to do that here.)

(7) Plug-in hybrids may well prove to be a transitional technology for all but the largest classes of vehicles. The continuing fall of lithium-ion cell prices—at the longstanding rate of about 7 percent a year, and in some cases considerably faster—has meant the cost trade offs between a combustion engine and a bigger battery have changed over the years.

Also, China’s desire for zero-emission vehicles without tailpipes means that battery-only cars will dominate that market.

But the biggest hurdle plug-in hybrids face is that more than seven years after the debut of the Chevrolet Volt, consumers still don’t understand what they are, how they work, or why they might be advantageous.

Consumers “get” hybrids: They run on gasoline, but are more efficient, somehow. And they “get” battery-electric cars: They’re cars you plug in, like mobile phones.

Mix the two, and their eyes glaze over. It’s a hybrid, but it has a plug? So it’s an electric car? But it’s only got 20 to 50 miles of range? Pfffft. You’ve lost them. Honda’s boiled down the advantages of its Clarity Plug-In Hybrid sedan about as much as humanly possible. But we’re betting that company, too, will be selling more all-electric vehicles than plug-in hybrids 10 or 15 years hence. As always, it’s going to be a fascinating evolution to watch.

Automotive News the Car Dealers Sure Can Use!

Sponsored by Gas.net — powering dealership growth through intelligent data.

Your browser does not support the video tag.

Alt text: “Gas.net connects franchise dealers with integrated analytics and marketing tools.”

Share 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
previous post
Technology Has No Limits; Only Human Vision Does
next post
Pitfalls to Avoid When Shopping for an Auto Loan on a Budget

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

You may also like

The Driving Sales Executive Summit – Expectations are Super High!

September 7, 2022

Driving Sales Executive Retreat is Oct. 9-10 at the Bellagio – It’s Gonna Be...

September 2, 2022

Data Breaches Can Cost Dealerships Millions in State Fines and Lawsuits

July 18, 2022

Is the Computer Chip Shortage End In Sight?

June 27, 2022

How Dealers Approach Automotive Photography in the Current Economy

June 7, 2022

EV Sales on the Rise in ’21 as Gas Prices Soar

May 28, 2021

Recent Posts

  • Rick Case Automotive Group CEO and Community Leader Rita Case Appointed to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s Miami Branch Board of Directors
  • Amberly Allen of Dealer Merchant Services is Delivering on a Great Idea that Saves Dealer Groups Millions
  • Brian Twoomey, GM Airport Marina Honda: Who has the upper hand in a car sale these days, the customer or the dealer?
  • Motivator Minute: Learn From the Past, Focus in the Present, and NEVER Worry About the Future
  • The Driving Sales Executive Summit – Expectations are Super High!

Recent Comments

  1. Ty Jacobb on Car Dealerships and Automotive YouTube Marketing Strategy
  2. Laurette Hilyard on How to Rank Higher on Google
  3. Kelly Kleinman on Benny Mazzier, Managing Partner with Marketing Solutions STL
  4. Benny Mazzier on Benny Mazzier, Managing Partner with Marketing Solutions STL
  5. Hal Hoadley on Improving Your Sales-to-Service Hand-Off

Follow Us

Recent Posts

  • Rick Case Automotive Group CEO and Community Leader Rita Case Appointed to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s Miami Branch Board of Directors

    January 19, 2023
  • Amberly Allen of Dealer Merchant Services is Delivering on a Great Idea that Saves Dealer Groups Millions

    January 19, 2023
  • Brian Twoomey, GM Airport Marina Honda: Who has the upper hand in a car sale these days, the customer or the dealer?

    January 19, 2023
  • Motivator Minute: Learn From the Past, Focus in the Present, and NEVER Worry About the Future

    September 29, 2022
  • The Driving Sales Executive Summit – Expectations are Super High!

    September 7, 2022

Newsletter

Categories

  • 2019 Vendors of the Year (16)
  • Advertising and Marketing (18)
  • Ask an Expert (4)
  • Authors (12)
  • Auto Dealer HR (1)
  • Blog (10)
  • Business Trends (72)
  • Car Humor (16)
  • CRM (5)
  • Dealership of the Week (1)
  • digital retailing (2)
  • Editor's Picks (3)
  • Exclusives (5)
  • Featured Blogger (13)
  • Finance & Interest (10)
  • FixedOps (17)
  • Future Trends (38)
  • Guest Bloggers (12)
  • Human Resources (22)
  • Interviews (144)
  • Job Board (1)
  • Lead Management (1)
  • Mid-Day Report (16)
  • NADA (27)
  • National Dealership Standings (34)
  • no show (1)
  • Podcast (10)
  • Press Release (21)
  • Reputation Management (6)
  • Sales (33)
  • Sean Kelley (4)
  • Sellers & Sitters (1)
  • Service (9)
  • Social Media (20)
  • Steve Roessler (1)
  • Technology (53)
  • Trending (81)
  • Uncategorized (21)
  • Vendor Reviews (1)
  • Vendor Selection (41)
  • Websites (16)
  • Who's Happening in Automotive (37)
Dealership News
  • Interviews
  • Business Trends
  • Sales
Dealership News
  • Interviews
  • Business Trends
  • Sales
@2021 - All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign