Survey: Americans strongly interested in more efficient cars and biofuels
The Automotive X Prize, an independent, technology-neutral competition designed to inspire a new generation of viable, super-efficient vehicles, recently presented results of a survey [*.pdf] showing Americans' enthusiasm for efficiency and alternative energy.
U.S. citizens see the development of 100 mile-per-gallon (2.35liter/100km) cars as one of the most powerful ideas for combating global warming. When asked to choose among six options to address climate change, 22 percent of all Americans surveyed chose the development of such an efficient vehicle. Developing 100 mpg cars is also one of the two strongest ideas, of seven tested, for reducing U.S. dependence on foreign oil and gas; 18 percent select it as one of their top two ideas for achieving this goal, with 21 percent selecting "requiring 25 percent of car fuel to come from renewable energy sources like ethanol", seen as the most powerful option.
The national survey conducted July 25-29, 2007, by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research also indicates an interesting gender divide on the issue, with men seeing the primary benefit of super-efficient autos as saving money on gas (38 percent) while women believe that the biggest benefit to buy a 100 MPG car is reducing pollution and global warming (35 percent).
Consumers remain wary of the costs of owning a highly fuel-efficient vehicle, naming cost by more than a 2-1 (43-19) margin over other reasons they would have doubts about buying such a car:
energy :: sustainability :: climate change :: ethanol :: biodiesel :: biofuels :: efficiency :: fuel economy :: transport ::
The Automotive X PRIZE will provide a multi-million dollar purse to the teams that can design, build and bring to market 100 MPG or equivalent fuel economy vehicles. The competition is expected to culminate in a Tour de France-style road race traveling through multiple cities while broadcast to a global audience in 2009 and 2010.
The Automotive X PRIZE announced earlier this month that 31 teams from 5 nations have already signaled their intent to compete for the multimillion dollar prize (previous post).
References:
Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research: Americans See 100 mpg Cars as Biggest Fix for Global Warming, Have High Interest in Purchasing, but also Sensitivity about Costs [*.pdf] - August 1, 2007
Automotive X Prize: Americans See 100 MPG Cars as Biggest Fix for Global Warming -
August 7, 2007
Biopact: Automotive X Prize gathers steam: 30 teams ready to compete - August 01, 2007
U.S. citizens see the development of 100 mile-per-gallon (2.35liter/100km) cars as one of the most powerful ideas for combating global warming. When asked to choose among six options to address climate change, 22 percent of all Americans surveyed chose the development of such an efficient vehicle. Developing 100 mpg cars is also one of the two strongest ideas, of seven tested, for reducing U.S. dependence on foreign oil and gas; 18 percent select it as one of their top two ideas for achieving this goal, with 21 percent selecting "requiring 25 percent of car fuel to come from renewable energy sources like ethanol", seen as the most powerful option.
It is clear to most Americans that the need to conserve energy and to find alternative means to power our automobiles is important to national security, as well as to their pocketbooks. The development of super-efficient vehicles is imperative if we are going to move beyond the incremental changes mandated by the federal government and those considered by Congress. - Donald J. Foley, executive director of the Automotive X PRIZENearly two-thirds (62 percent) of all Americans expressed a strong interest in purchasing 100 mpg vehicles and more than three quarters (76 percent) of those surveyed thought such a development would be extremely or very important to the United States.
The national survey conducted July 25-29, 2007, by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research also indicates an interesting gender divide on the issue, with men seeing the primary benefit of super-efficient autos as saving money on gas (38 percent) while women believe that the biggest benefit to buy a 100 MPG car is reducing pollution and global warming (35 percent).
Consumers remain wary of the costs of owning a highly fuel-efficient vehicle, naming cost by more than a 2-1 (43-19) margin over other reasons they would have doubts about buying such a car:
energy :: sustainability :: climate change :: ethanol :: biodiesel :: biofuels :: efficiency :: fuel economy :: transport ::
Automakers understand the price-sensitivity of the buying public and developing a super-efficient vehicle will not exempt them from addressing this core, consumer concern. We stipulate in our draft competition guidelines that vehicles must meet strict safety, efficiency and carbon emissions as well as finish in the fastest times. To win in the marketplace, teams must obviously develop vehicles that consumers can afford and will find attractive to buy. - Donald J. Foley, executive director of the Automotive X PRIZEThe independent and technology-neutral Automotive X Prize competition is open to teams from around the world to prove they can design, build and bring to market 100 MPG or equivalent fuel economy vehicles that people want to buy. Industry experts will scrutinize team plans. Those that qualify will race their vehicles in rigorous cross-country stages that combine speed, distance, urban driving and overall performance. The winners will be the vehicles that exceed 100 MPG equivalent, fall under strict emissions caps and finish in the fastest time.
The Automotive X PRIZE will provide a multi-million dollar purse to the teams that can design, build and bring to market 100 MPG or equivalent fuel economy vehicles. The competition is expected to culminate in a Tour de France-style road race traveling through multiple cities while broadcast to a global audience in 2009 and 2010.
The Automotive X PRIZE announced earlier this month that 31 teams from 5 nations have already signaled their intent to compete for the multimillion dollar prize (previous post).
References:
Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research: Americans See 100 mpg Cars as Biggest Fix for Global Warming, Have High Interest in Purchasing, but also Sensitivity about Costs [*.pdf] - August 1, 2007
Automotive X Prize: Americans See 100 MPG Cars as Biggest Fix for Global Warming -
August 7, 2007
Biopact: Automotive X Prize gathers steam: 30 teams ready to compete - August 01, 2007
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