Summer Gas-Price Outlook Fuels Car Nostalgia

May 19, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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With the first weekend of summer driving season approaching and gasoline closing in on $4 per gallon, Washington did the two paltry things it could do quickly. The administration stopped stockpiling emergency supplies of oil, after an overwhelming rebuke of that policy by Congress. And President Bush went hat in hand to the Saudis, who after initial balking, agreed to a modest production increase in a few weeks. The price of oil has wavered little in response.

Far from making progress on the nation's energy woes, there is evidence that we've actually regressed. No one summed this up for me better than a recent commenter to this blog who noted that he bought a Geo Metro that got 50 miles per gallon in 1992 for less than $10,000. No car is on U.S. highways today with that kind of mileage except the expensive hybrids (and then, only when you're driving slowly and in electric mode.)

Some checking revealed that a kind of cult had formed around the high-mileage Metro, and a New York man dedicates a website to his experiment of cutting his Metro in half to achieve 75 mpg fuel economy.

But right out of the showroom, these were high-achieving cars. The government's fuel economy website shows the Suzuki-engineered Chevy Geo Metro got 46 mpg (combined city and highway driving) when it debuted in 1989. But the latest model of the Chevrolet Aveo, seen as the successor car, now gets 26 mpg. What's going wrong?

Even if the automakers still don't value high gas mileage, car buyers certainly do. It's now been widely reported that the resale value of used Geo Metros and Ford Festivas has soared from about $1,000 a few months ago to $6,000 today.

The blog Left Lane News worries about the safety implications of a return to "econoboxes." But here's where the rubber truly meets the road (so to speak) for the automakers, because folks like energy guru Amory Lovins contend that the ultralight carbon materials of today could produce cars that are light, safe, and with great fuel economy.

Automakers say that will cost too much, and so we're stuck in this energy quagmire. Gas prices now top $4 a gallon in Chicago and on Long Island. And a new Rand McNally survey says two thirds of Americans who would have taken road trips this summer are either curtailing their plans or canceling altogether.

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This reporter hasn't done her homework at all. She states that 50 mpg can be achieved only in "expensive" hybrids and only in "electric mode." That's patently false.

My new 2008 Prius got nearly 50 mpg on 2 recent road trips (Grand Rapids, Michigan to Saint Louis & Chicago). We did the speed limit, which was 65-70 most of the way, and had the A/C on, and still averaged 49 mpg.

Is the Prius "expensive"? Without a lot of options, you could buy a new 2008 for $23,000. Mine cost $26,000 nicely loaded. The 2009 model, arriving in dealerships Sept & Oct 2008, will cost little more than the 2008.

What's prohibitively expensive is guzzling $5-per-gallon gas in a non-hybrid car that gets only 25-35 mpg.

Moreover, gas is heading for $6 per gallon fairly soon -- VERY soon if Israel attacks Iran. That statement about the Prius being "expensive" will look even more foolish then.

AmericaForever of MI 10:41AM July 07, 2008

ride your bike????yhea bud yuo dont have a clue what your talking about you must be a flatander, from some foo foo city or something...most of the u.s is rural,thats where the backbone of our country is how about you sleep in a cave so we dont cut down the forest that made your house..huh? you seem pretty comfortable talking about alternatives.

willy-p of CA 9:38PM June 15, 2008

As time goes on people become more and more reliant on gas/oil. People know this, especially those companies who produce these resources. I read above about someone saying we put a man on the moon 39 years ago so why cant we get 80mpg? The answer is very simple. Money. The green stuff that drives people to doing things they normally would. If you youtube a video on a car that runs on water you will see that alternative sources can be used... OUT OF YOUR TAP! However, the controversy behind this story is that the man who created this invention (believe his name was Stanley Meyer) was offered mass amounts of money. Billions possibly, just to keep his product off the market. His invention separated hydrogen from water. Following his decline of these offers he was MURDERED. Murdered by money and greed. If Meyer's brilliance hit the market the oil companies would soon lose the business that they loved so much. Out of greed he lost his life. This invention is still a mystery, but an answer to being able to fill your car up with an outside hose.

Kiva Gordon of 1:34PM May 28, 2008

Beyond the Barrel

Marianne Lavelle, senior writer, seeks out the path to an energy future that doesn’t wreck the planet or put you in the poorhouse.

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