David Herron September 9, 2015Hybrid Cars
This week Toyota unveiled the 2016
Toyota Prius at a large press event in Las Vegas. The catch phrase
pushed by Toyota, “Beyond Possible”, makes me wonder why Toyota is so stuck on
Hybrids and not moving forward into the future with battery electric vehicles.
Sticking with their tried-and-true puts Toyota not in the position of
breaking new territory, but shying away from the bright new possibilities
offered by plug-in battery electric vehicle technology.
It’s
not like Toyota didn’t have a chance to explore that technology. They did
make an investment in Tesla Motors,the two companies did
work together on the Gen2 Toyota RAV4 EV, etc. There’d even
been talk that Toyota and Tesla would
co-develop a plug-in electric car once the Gigafactory was up and running.
But something happened and Toyota sold off their
stake in Tesla Motors, and rather than embrace battery electric
vehicles Toyota has pushed forward into fuel
cell vehicles with the Toyota Mirai.
With
that in mind let’s look at the little bit of information Toyota released about the
2016 Prius.
First off, this is the newest
revision of the Prius platform. In 2010 Toyota released the Gen3 Prius,
and now they’re on the Gen4 Prius platform.
Automakers like to keep the same
“platform” for a few years, doing minor revisions from year to year, and then
making a major revision every 5-7 years. It lets them get the most return
on investment.
But, it being a new Prius Platform
doesn’t seem to have changed the core design proposition — a hybrid drive train
that still locks you into 100% complete dependency on gasoline.
In fact, the press release says
zilch about the Toyota Plug-in Prius. It’s possible that model has
been quietly dropped from the Prius lineup. The Toyota website, at press
time, lists the 2016 Prius v and nothing else. The press release talks
about creature comfort changes and a few other things, but nothing about drive
train choices.
The press release has a curious line
– “it’s not just about MPG anymore” and “Today’s customers want all the
traditional benefits of a hybrid, but don’t want to compromise on looks and
performance”.
In other words, Toyota believes
their customers simply want to get in and drive and not fuss around too much
with specifics of the drive train. The customers don’t even care about
fuel efficiency that much, if Toyota is to be believed. For whatever it’s
worth, the press release focuses on style (looks, creature comforts, the size
of the car, etc) over functionality.
I’d
heard that in the early 1990’s Toyota had taken to heart the reality of Peak Oil and Climate Change,
and set about developing hybrid car expertise as their contribution to
addressing those threats. Today’s Toyota doesn’t seem to care about those
issues any longer.
No comments:
Post a Comment