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Cheap Gas Fuels Switch From Electric Cars To SUVs

schwit1 points out news that's sure to clash with Earth Day narratives: drivers who bought hybrid and electric cars are switching back to SUVs at a higher rate than ever. Quoting: According to Edmunds.com, about 22 percent of people who have traded in their hybrids and EVs in 2015 bought a new SUV. The number represents a sharp increase from 18.8 percent last year, and it is nearly double the rate of 11.9 percent just three years ago. Overall, only 45 percent of this year's hybrid and EV trade-ins have gone toward the purchase of another alternative fuel vehicle, down from just over 60 percent in 2012. Never before have loyalty rates for alt-fuel vehicles fallen below 50 percent. ... Edmunds calculates that at the peak average national gas price of $4.67/gallon in October 2012, it would take five years to break even on the $3,770 price difference between a Toyota Camry LE Hybrid ($28,230) and a Toyota Camry LE ($24,460). At today's national average gas price of $2.27/gallon, it would take twice as much time (10.5 years) to close the same gap.

30 of 622 comments (clear)

  1. Progressive Fix 101 by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Tax gas and spend the proceeds on "green" R&D.

    1. Re:Progressive Fix 101 by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 5, Informative

      Eliminate any exceptions to the CAFE standard for SUVs.

      Background: The SUV class of vehicle only exists because it was a loophole in the CAFE standards. Automakers had to meet a 'fleet average' fuel economy for every vehicle they sold.

      That meant Chevy needed to produce and sell a significant number of fuel-economical vehicles for each gas guzzler they sold. That requirement alone forced the Station Wagon almost entirely out of the market, because Chevy wants to sell heavily equipped pickup trucks to people who want them (will spend lots of extra $$) and not just to people who need them. Also to sell vettes and other crap.

      The SUV loophole was that 'light sport utility vehicles' were exempt from the fleet average calculation, so the manufacturers sold the hell out of them.

      Eliminate the SUV loophole and the big bloated turds would be gone quickly. Soccer moms ignoring the road because they're texting need to drive minivans with little engines, not pigiron.

    2. Re:Progressive Fix 101 by TWX · · Score: 4, Informative

      Because you do not name the SUV I do not believe you.

      On average, car-based SUVs (which are usually classed as "CUVs") get almost car-efficiency, but truck-based SUVs, the only ones worth owning as true sport utility vehicles, still lag behind cars.

      I think that the exemptions for SUVs and trucks need to be eliminated entirely when under a certain GVWR, and that basically "half ton" trucks in the form of Class 1 light trucks sold as lifestyle trucks need to meet this standard. "three quarter ton" trucks sold as Class 2 trucks need to meet a fairly stringent standard too.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    3. Re:Progressive Fix 101 by bigwheel · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And keep in mind that the EV owners, who do not pay gas tax, are driving relatively heavy vehicles.
      Chevy Volt (small car) weighs more than a Honda CRV (SUV)
      Tesla S (sedan) weighs more than a Ford F-150 (full-size truck)

    4. Re:Progressive Fix 101 by DRJlaw · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Of course the huge difference is that progressives are concerned about real problems, and the ignorant conservatives are concerned about imaginary enemies and preserving superstition. There's really no comparison with the conservatives completely off the rails from hate-radio, wingnut blogs, and Fox News.

      Exactly. progressives are right, conservatives are wrong, and there's absolutely no need to address anyone else's issues because Truth. Which is exactly what the GP was complaining of, but with respect to both extremes.

      Meanwhile the people actually involved purchased a hybrid before switching to an SUV, which suggests that they're neither stereotypically conservative nor stereotypically progressive. There's valuable objective information embedded in that problem, yet you want to focus on which of the stereotypes is superior to the other.

      Way to miss the point, as well as a shining opportunity to address the real world concerns and behavior of the 'middle.'

    5. Re:Progressive Fix 101 by Smidge204 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      None of these vehicles have a substantial impact on roads, though. Heavy trucking accounts for the vast majority of road wear.

      That said, I have no problem with paying to help maintain the roads even if my contribution to their wear is practically nonexistent. I benefit from our highway infrastructure because even if I never drive on them, I almost certainly use products and commodities that are transported over them.

      Keep the gas tax, maybe even increase it, to pay for the problems that fossil fuel consumption causes.

      Add a new, independent road maintenance fee that's based on vehicle weight and miles driven.
      =Smidge=

    6. Re:Progressive Fix 101 by bigwheel · · Score: 4, Informative

      Full of shit? In every case, I typed the model into Google, and took the lowest number. The rest of the weight are for options, so they are not relevant.

      The ones I mentioned were because the Volt and CRV had already been discussed. I have an F-150, and it the best selling vehicle in the US for the past 32 years. (source: wikipedia) I chose the Tesla because some people cream their pants green whenever they hear that word.

      Tough shit that Ford is making an aluminum F-150. Good for them. The Tesla is also aluminum, so it is an apples-vs-apples comparison.

      That said, here are the numbers right from the manufacturers:

      Ford F-150 4x2 = 4,050 LBS source: http://www.ford.com/trucks/f15...
      (Note that even their tiny engine has 325 HP and 375 ft-lbs of torque, which is necessary for a truck)
      -vs-
      Tesla S = 4,647 LBS source: http://www.teslamotors.com/sup...
      (If the Tesla has higher horsepower, it is only useful for making the owner's dick get hard.)

      Honda CRV = 3358 lbs source: http://automobiles.honda.com/c...
      -vs-
      Chevy Volt Base Curb Weight = 3786 lbs source: http://www.chevrolet.com/volt-...

      Despite what you want to believe, the numbers are what they are. And I just wasted a half-hour looking them up for you.

    7. Re:Progressive Fix 101 by Ravaldy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Maybe you want to review your numbers. I see compact and sedans seeing a 15 to 20% more efficient combined fuel consumption. Is that equal to no difference to you?

      SUVs in order of efficiency:
      http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg...

      Small and Family cars:
      http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg...

  2. 1000 times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We've read this a 1000 times. Stupid people think prices will be low forever. A year later said people cry they are paying $250 a week for gas. Can't fix stupid.

    1. Re:1000 times by ndavis · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is very true. As someone with a Ford Focus Electric many people keep telling me I made a bad decision because of cheap gas prices. I tell them I enjoy the ride and it is working out fine having no fuel expense and as my company has chargers I fill up for near $0 each month considering I hardly plus in at home. However these people are purchasing large SUVs will complain bitterly when/if gas prices go back up.

    2. Re:1000 times by unimacs · · Score: 3, Informative

      MSRP for a Prius is $25,000. People pay around 22,000. A RAV 4 (small SUV) starts at about the same price. A mid-sized SUV is going to be closer to 30,000 (on the low end).

  3. Buying cars based on fuel price... ugh by netsavior · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For most people, especially ones with NEW cars, the cost of fuel is such a small portion of TCO that gas mileage is almost inconsequential within reason. People get psychotic when gas swings one way or another because people are idiots, who cannot ignore the 20-80 dollars they spent today in favor of focusing on the 500 dollars they pay every month.

    1. Re:Buying cars based on fuel price... ugh by LWATCDR · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Because paying $540 dollars a month is better than paying $580 a month.
      The other fact is that pure gas cars are getting really good milage. The Mazda 6 is rated at 40mpg on the highway. The new CX-5 CUV is over 30mpg hwy.
      My Chevy Cruze is averaging over 33 mpg for me.
       

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:Buying cars based on fuel price... ugh by tompaulco · · Score: 4, Interesting

      For most people, especially ones with NEW cars, the cost of fuel is such a small portion of TCO that gas mileage is almost inconsequential within reason. People get psychotic when gas swings one way or another because people are idiots, who cannot ignore the 20-80 dollars they spent today in favor of focusing on the 500 dollars they pay every month.

      Maybe they shouldn't assume that fuel cost is the reason people got rid of their electrics. Maybe they got tired of the low range, or the length of recharge times, or the inability to haul large items (they are in for a surprise on how little you can put in an SUV, though). Maybe they got tired of having one car for fuel economy and one car for everything else.
      The article is trying to paint a picture that people who switch are shortsighted idiots, but there are many other far more likely reasons that people switched.
      It does make one feel better about one's own inferior intellect if one paints everybody else as an idiot.

      Slashdot Quote: The first version always gets thrown away.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    3. Re:Buying cars based on fuel price... ugh by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Informative

      Your Imperial gallon is larger than a US Gallon.
      So he Mazda 6 gets 46 mpg on gas in UK terms.
      The Chevy Cruze Diesel gets over 55 mpg.
      Also the US uses a different testing method than the EU so often the same car with the same engine will get better ratings in the EU.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    4. Re:Buying cars based on fuel price... ugh by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The other fact is that pure gas cars are getting really good milage. The Mazda 6 is rated at 40mpg on the highway. The new CX-5 CUV is over 30mpg hwy.

      Those are highway mileages. Anything with regenerative breaking will beat pure gas cars around town where there's a significant amount of brakeing.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  4. Hybrid != EV by zwede · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I didn't see them breaking it down by make/model...

    An owner of a Lexus hybrid-SUV trading it in on a non-hybrid SUV is one thing.

    But I very much doubt that there's a line of Leaf or Tesla owners trading their EVs for SUVs.

  5. !switching back by AmiMoJo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    TFA is beyond dumb. It's not people switching back, it's people buying a second car for their household. Many people have one EV and one ICE car.

    EV sales are rising fast. Few people switch back after getting one and realizing how great they are, mostly because they did their homework and made sure it suited them before spending tens of thousands of dollars.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    1. Re:!switching back by David_Hart · · Score: 5, Insightful

      TFA is beyond dumb. It's not people switching back, it's people buying a second car for their household. Many people have one EV and one ICE car.

      EV sales are rising fast. Few people switch back after getting one and realizing how great they are, mostly because they did their homework and made sure it suited them before spending tens of thousands of dollars.

      Um, No.... From the article "about 22 percent of people who have traded in their hybrids and EVs in 2015 bought a new SUV". These are direct trade-ins, not the purchase of a second car.

      Life changes. People who are single or a couple who have smaller cars, no matter what type, will buy a bigger car when they have kids, get married, etc. I'm willing to bet that this explains a good percentage of this.

      Other explanations might include buying SUVs to tow new recreational toys such as a boats, snow mobiles, etc. There aren't many hybrids on the market that are set up for towing.

  6. These calculations for are so stupid. by AndyMoney · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My Camry Hybrid is quieter, smoother, and has over 30 extra HP compared to the 4 cyl Camry. You don't ONLY get improved mileage from most hybrids. They should be comparing the cost of the hybrid vs. the V6 model when calculating years to make up cost (not a perfect comparison, but much closer). They are just skewing statistics...

  7. I'm driving a rented Nissan Pathfinder while my by mark_reh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    car is being repaired. Ridiculous! 20 MPG and every time I step on the brakes or the gas it rocks back and forth like a rocking chair. It seats about as many people as a sedan and can carry only slightly more junk than a sedan. Why do people want to drive these things? They aren't attractive, they don't stop/go fast, they can't carry much stuff. I don't get it.

    I don't understand why so many people want to drive pickups either. In a pickup you can only haul stuff you care about in decent weather. I get it if you're a farmer or ranch hand and need to haul messy stuff year round, but why would anyone else want to drive a truck? And why is it that the bigger the pickup, the greater the odds that they will back into parking spaces?

    1. Re:I'm driving a rented Nissan Pathfinder while my by magarity · · Score: 4, Funny

      but why would anyone else want to drive a truck?

      So they can tell their friends they won't help them move.

    2. Re:I'm driving a rented Nissan Pathfinder while my by Overzeetop · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's a lot of truth in that. I have a Dodge Grand Caravan. I hate it with every fiber of my being, but it is the ideal vehicle in many ways except self esteem. It can carry longer items (up to 10') easier than my truck, it can carry more things inside than most SUVs - and all the back seats fold down to make a large flat cargo space in under a minute. It gets mid-20s gas mileage on the open road. It will *comfortably* seat 6 adults and still have room for a weekend of luggage, or four golfers with a weekend of luggage and 4 sets of clubs.

      The only real down sides are
            it is not good in snow/ice conditions. Though, to be fair, my wife's Subaru is still better in bad weather than my 4WD truck.
            it cannot compete with a small car for fuel efficiency (if you're travelling with 4 or fewer passengers)
            it sucks the very life out of your soul as a driver and owner

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  8. Woohoo we win, hippies!! by NotDrWho · · Score: 5, Funny

    Love,
    The Oil Industry

    P.S. We secretly own Whole Foods. You dumb fucks have been giving your money to us all along.

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  9. Not about saving money by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 3, Informative

    Where I live (Vancouver, Canada) the purchase of an electric car is never about savings over gas prices. Even here, where gas costs ~$1.25 CAD per liter and hydroelectric residential power costs $0.0797 CAD per kWh for first 1,350 kWh ($0.1195 CAD per kWh over the 1,350), with a car like the Nissan Leaf you'll never save enough over the life of the car in fuel costs to offset the higher price for the car.

    For the people I know with Leafs and Volts it's about doing their bit to reduce pollution and CO2 output, not saving money.

  10. They already have batteries good for 10 years... by dlenmn · · Score: 4, Informative

    Let me know when Toyota starts shipping hybrid vehicles with batteries that actually retain their ability to recharge to a usable capacity for 10+ years.

    They've been shipping those batteries... since 2001. See this 10 year checkup from Consumer Reports:

    http://www.consumerreports.org...

    Moreover, Toyota made it so that you can replace individual battery cells, instead of only being able to replace everything at once. My GF's Prius needed a few cells replaced, and the price was quite reasonable. ($250? I forget the exact number.)

  11. Gas isn't free(as in beer), Many charge points are by Ryyuajnin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't care how cheep gas gets, Plenty of EV charging stations are 100% free. Last I checked, no one in my area was giving away free gas?

    Further, people are obviously uninformed or misled on how EV's are, in the most important ways, superior automobiles for the daily use:

    1) ZERO MAINTENANCE (except for breaks & tires, wipers/fluid)
    2) Vastly fewer points of failure - NO: fuel pumps, alternators, starters, automatic transmission(unless you count a 1 speed transmission), main seals, mufflers, fuel injectors, heater cores, etc., etc...
    3) Electricity is far cheaper than any gas any where every day.
    4) Used EV's are SUPER CHEAP right now - http://goo.gl/ZAJV81
    5) EV's are super quiet, peaceful, meditative.

  12. I really hate reports like this by NoNeeeed · · Score: 3, Interesting

    1) Combine two things that are sort of similar but not really - e.g. EVs and hybrids or tablets and e-ink e-readers
    2) Make a statistical claim about the combined group - 'People are leaving EVs and hybrids", "Tablets and E-readers bad for sleep/eyes"
    3) Forget to mention one of the two in the headline - 'People dump EVs', 'E-readers bad for sleep/eyes"

    By combining the two, this report doesn't really tell us anything useful. I'd love to know the different rates of people abandoning EV or hybrids, as I think they are two very different propositions.

    Hybrids, at the end of the day, are simply a different way of building efficient petrol/diesel powered cars. From what I've heard that efficiency has been a lot less in real life, with milage claims for things like the Prius not really living up to the hype. With ever more efficient petrol engines on the market, and gas prices so low, the efficiency improvements have to be pretty significant to make a big difference and to offset the higher cost of buying many hybrids.

    EVs on the other hand are a totally different beast, and the reasons people might give up on them are different. Are people buying EVs and then finding range is more of a problem than they thought? Did they have problems finding charing points? Was overnight, at-home charging not good enough for them? Etc, etc.

    In addition, this report talks about the number of people who are trading in their EVs/Hybrids for something else. But that doesn't really tell us anything about how much people like EVs and Hybrids as it only includes people who are switching. It doesn't provide any analysis of how many people are keeping their EVs for longer.

    What's most annoying is that there are genuinely interesting questions to be asking about the EV and hybrid market, but this data isn't really answering any of them well.

  13. It's not just cheaper gas by Solandri · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's another reason. There are a lot more hybrid, diesel, and efficient trucks and SUVs becoming available. Most Americans' sense of the fuel efficiency of vehicles is distorted because it's measured in MPG. MPG is actually the inverse of fuel economy. Consequently the amount of fuel saved by vehicles like the Prius is exaggerated.

    Here are the EPA figures for a 2004 3L 4WD Toyota Highlander, a 2015 3L 4WD Toyota Highlander Hybrid, and a 2015 Prius. Say you'd previously owned the 2004 Highlander and were looking to replace it. If you looked only at MPG, you'd think the Prius saves you a lot more gas than the Highlander Hybrid. The Prius gets 31 more MPG while the Highlander Hybrid only gets 9 more MPG.

    But MPG is the inverse of fuel economy. Scroll down to "Annual Fuel Cost". The 2004 Highlander is estimated to cost $1900/yr in fuel. The Highlander Hybrid $1300/yr. The Prius $700/yr. In other words, switching to the Highlander Hybrid saves you $600/yr. Switching to the Prius saves you $1200/yr. The Highlander Hybrid gives you 50% the fuel savings of a Prius despite "only" getting a 9 MPG improvement vs 31 MPG improvement. How can this be? Because MPG is the inverse of fuel economy. Every time you double MPG, you save half the fuel you did in the previous doubling.

    A lot of people laughed when hybrid trucks and SUVs first came out. If you want to save gas with a hybrid, why are you buying a big truck instead of an econobox like the Prius? But they were being deceived by MPG being the inverse of fuel consumption. If we as a country want to reduce fuel consumption, it's actually the low MPG vehicles like trucks and SUVs whose fuel economy you want to improve first by hybrid-izing them. They're the ones burning a disproportionately large amount of fuel, so improving their mileage first will save more fuel. Economy cars already burn so little fuel that making them a hybrid gets you little improvement. e.g. Dropping a hybrid in a 35 MPG economy car to get 50 MPG only saves you $350/yr by EPA estimates. While dropping the hybrid in a 19 MPG SUV to get 28 MPG saves you $600/yr. In other words, each SUV-buyer you can convince to buy a hybrid SUV instead saves nearly twice as much fuel as each environmentalist you convince to switch from their already-efficient car to a Prius.

    If we really want to save gas, we should be concentrating on ways to improve the mileage of pickup trucks, SUVs, minivans, and tractor trailers (actually most of their cargo should be shifted to trains, but that's another argument). The rest of the world uses liters/100 km to avoid this misconception about fuel economy.

  14. Re:/me is waiting for the cheaper Tesla baby! by grimmjeeper · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My point was really that electric cars are only one part of the solution. If you don't look at the whole system, you may be just exchanging one kind of pollution for another. If you can get clean energy to power your electric car, then you're doing it right. But if you're exchanging gasoline for coal to power your car, you're not helping as much as you think you are.

    It's like all of those people claiming ethanol is such a great fuel because it's clean burning and renewable. What they don't understand is that many of the new ethanol plants in the heartland burn tons of coal to produce that ethanol. So the ethanol they produce isn't what I would call as much of a "net positive" as other alternatives.