Leland Teschler, Editor
A high honcho from the automaker’s
management team first
trots out on stage and utters a few
platitudes about listening to the
market. The vehicle emerges from
under a sheet or, to heighten the
drama, gets driven out of artificial
fog. Then the show centers on
Hans, the exterior stylist, and his
sidekick Sven who was in charge
of interior design. For several minutes
they wax poetic about the
emotional impact of the body lines
and the colors of the interior.
Unless the new vehicle is something
along the lines of a Dodge
Viper, you must listen closely to
catch any mention of what’s in the
powertrain.
All this changed last month
in Detroit. Hans and Sven were
still in evidence, but they were
almost an afterthought. The new
message hammered home by one
automaker after another: “We’ve
got a green powertrain.”
Every concept car to emerge
from underneath the sheets or
out of the artificial fog rode
on some sort of plug-in hybrid
power. But these plug-in hybrid
schemes are all at least two years
away from being practical. New
models set to arrive on showroom
floors this year get green
credentials from the fuels they
burn. They are either mixedmode
hybrids like the Prius, diesels,
or they incorporate a more
fuel-miserly ignition scheme
and can burn ethanol. Even new
Hummers will be running on
biofuel.
Automakers can be excused
for falling all over themselves to sound green.
It seems that,
at last, fuel
economy
has become
a selling
point for new vehicles. But this
exuberance also led to some odd
pronouncements at the Detroit
show. One of them came from
Toyota. The world’s largest automaker
had taken flak for lobbying
against CAFE standards that
would have impeded its ability
to sell trucks here. At the show,
however, a Toyota executive
claimed it was high time CAFE
standards were tightened.
The most bizarre, though,
came from General Motors. GM
CEO Rick Wagoner announced
a partnership between the automaker
and Coskata Inc., an
ethanol producer. As he described
Coskata’s process, Wagoner
phrased his announcement
as though the company had repealed
the laws of thermodynamics.
“For every unit of energy
that the Coskata process
uses,” said Wagoner, “it creates
up to 7.7 times that amount of
energy.”
I thought Wagoner’s statements
about Coskata’s technology
were confusing, so much so
that I grabbed a GM research
chief afterwards and asked her
what in the world Wagoner had
meant. We filmed her answer
and you can see it in a video
posted on EngineeringTV.com.
You’ll be happy to know that
GM hasn’t really overturned the
work of Lord Kelvin, though I’m
still not sure Wagoner understands
that. But at least the automaker
didn’t rely on fake fog to
get its point across about green
powertrains.