Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
April 22, 2011 | Length: 00:02:03
Painful prices at the pump are forcing many drivers to rethink their current means of transportation. One option? Hybrids - but they often cost a few thousand dollars more than traditional fuel cars. As gas prices climb though, consumers can earn back that hybrid penalty over a shorter period of time. SmartPlanet correspondent Sumi Das explains how you can figure out whether or not a hybrid car is worth it.
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RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
In
Keep your unfounded opinion to yourself
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
have a ford and wish i didn't.
Wishing isn't facts
Keep your unfounded opinion to yourself
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
I doubt if a car with major battery dependence will ever be a true replacement for a gasoline/diesel engine vehicle. Battery replacement will be every 3 to 5 years. That's a several thousand dollar bite for an electric. A thousand dollar bite for a hybride, and a 100 dollar bite for a standard car.
High capacity batteries are expensive, and probably always will be. We might be better served with accepting the energy penalty of energy conversion to make some renewable fuel. We just need a good energy source that doesn't replace food production with energy production.
Short term hybrids are good for mileage boost. But factor in replacement of the batteries in your costs.
Batteries - So far so good
Now with gas prices climbing again, I don't regret the investment at the time. I too will be happiest to see battery long term reliability improve so that the hybrid cars are reliable with NO reservations so they're more readily accepted. There definitely is the potential to reduce fuel consumption and being able to go the full working life of a vehicle on the original battery pack would take the fear-factor out of the extra up front costs.
Batteries
3?
And you had each car HOW long...
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
No.
"As gas prices climb though, consumers can earn back that hybrid penalty over a shorter period of time"
Yeah, 3.7 years instead of 5, and that's only if you compare the Prius to a Civic, and, as jim77kahn noted, doesn't take in the cost of battery replacement or maintenance.
Also, does the claim that if everyone switched to hybrid or electric vehicles we could reduce greenhouse gasses 50% take into account the greenhouse gasses used to produced and ship the vehicles, included the extra emissions used to produce the hybrid and battery technology, as well as the increase in greenhouse gasses required to produce extra electriciy?
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
True efficient vehicles get 60+ mpg and run on diesel. Only North Americans have been brainwashed enough to think that 50pmg is good fuel economy.
Diesel - energy density
And as for being brainwashed, the only brainwashing that is happening is that expecting conventional motored (no energy recovery system), heavy vehicles, typical of the North America car market (nearly all >3000 lbs) to get much over 40 mpg, is goofy. Vehicles need to be lighter as well as more efficient. Efficiency comes in both the ability to get the most motion from the least fuel as well as the ability to recover some of the energy invested in motion for re-use like hybrids do to varying extents.
Don't obsess over MPG, it's GPM that matters.
Let's say you have a beast of an SUV that gets 10MPG and drive 10K miles in a year. That's 1000 gallons of fuel to drive that car. Now replace that car with something like a minivan or one of the newer crossover vehicles that gets about 20MPG. Now you use 500 gallons of fuel, a savings of 500 gallons. And unless you have a really large trailer that you 'need' to tow, you've probably given up nothing significant. Go from 20MPG to 30MPG and you use 333 gallons of fuel, saving 167 gallons. Even going from 20MPG to 40MPG you save 250 gallons, still a good savings but you give up pretty significant capability (passenger seating, load and towing capacity. Of course if you don't need to seat 7 and their gear, go for it.) And going from 50MPG to 60MPG? You save 33 gallons of fuel in a year. Not that we should stop trying to improve mileage at any point, but convincing virtually everyone to increase to the maximum mileage vehicle that still meets their needs is a much bigger savings in fuel than getting a handful of specially eco-sensitive folks to drive super high mpg vehicles. (And I know people who've chosen to by a Yukon over a Traverse because the traverse would 'only' get 5MPG better mileage. Best change the EPA could make would be to sticker cars with "gallons per 10K miles" rather than MPG.)
Re: Don't obsess over MPG, it's GPM that matters.
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
Love our loaded Fusion Hybrid.
Re: Love our loaded Fusion Hybrid.
Isn't the point of these things supposed to be that they save money (or CO2)? Yet people extol the virtues of hybrids without having any clue how much they're saving or even if they're saving any at all. Amazing.
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
But you wanna know what's most sad and disappointing about all these cars? They are all so darn FUGLY! I wouldn't even want to be a passenger in one of these cars for fears of looking like a complete dork! Then there's the outright smugness of these hybrid drivers! Talk about entitled drivers! No...not me thanks! For as long as I can afford to, I will continue to drive my gas-guzzler!...So remember this you tree-huggers...for every gallon you save, and every ton of CO2 you don't put in the atmosphere, I am burning 10 gallons of gas and dumping 100 tons of CO2...You'll never win!
Wow
Wrong Again
The Earth is self cleaning, a single volcano puts so much CO2 and other gases into the atmosphere, the use of vehicles has a insignificant impact. I could make up numbers like other posters or should I say (Imposters) And I thouroughly think that conservation of resources is a great thing, ya gotta get over your self! I suppose we through the use of petroleum products caused the Tectonic plates to shift and cause the terrible Earthquake and subsequent Tsunami which was visited upon Japan recently. Our insignificance on the Earth is easy to see when you look at cultures and civilizations which no longer exist. Mayan, Pompeii, etc...Where are all the great species of creatures, ie, Dinosaurs which have become extinct? Mother Earth is in control and she maintains the thermostat and calls the punches, not mankind. Get over yourself. Live by the golden rule and you will have a better quality of life.....
You said it!
Jenn~
volcanoes not greater source of C02
"Global volcanic CO2 emission estimates are uncertain, but there is little doubt that the anthropogenic CO2 emission rate is more than a hundred times greater than the global volcanic CO2 emission rate. "
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
I have an OLD comfortable car that gets 18-20mpg. If I got 5ompg in line with the hype I would "save" 30mpg or $.20 per mile.. At $4.00 per gallon I need to drive a lot of mile to pay for the golf cart.
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
on the expressway till the gasoline got polluted with ethanol. Now I
get 30 mpg around town and 39 on the expressway. The Saturn
cost $11,000. Could I have 2 fuel efficient cars please?
We're going backwards.
RE: Are hybrids worth the extra-cost?
instead of petrol,
I use LPG to great advantage and put less Carbon into the
atmosphere.
Eric Hind
Not Yet
No.
The Honda is affordable with 80 percent of the fuel economy performance for 55 percent of the cost.
And to agree with tech-ed, the Honda is better looking.
Plus do the math.
Is it better for the planet to replace 1,000 cars getting 22 mpg with expensive Priuses getting 50 mpg or replace 100,000 cars getting 22 mpg with affordable cars getting 40 mpg?
The smart money for saving the planet is on the lower cost, bigger impact car.
Hybrids are as good as wind power
We'd be much better off punch holes in the ground to become energy independent - that's a sure thing.
YES IT IS!
YES Electrics and Hybrids are Better on Total Cost Basis
i agree, yes it is!
@ mitzi56
Smaller..but would you put your loved ones in heavy traffic in one?
What everyone it seems keeps missing about hybrids n electrics
I notice that most of the claims here for hybrids being worth the extra cost are by actual owners who have only 3 to 5 yrs of use of their vehicles before trading them in for a new one. Of course battery replacement won't be an issue for them since they don't keep the car long enough for it to wear out.
An important fact that seems to get ignored in these discussions is that not everyone buys every car they own new from the dealer. In fact used car sales far outnumber new. A hybrid that hits the used car market with only a few years left on the battery pack won't be worth near as much as it's conventionally powered counterpart. How many of us drive cars that are over 10 years old or have more than 100K miles? Today's gasoline engined cars easily reach 150 to 200K miles before they need an engine rebuild (which would be for the most part a comparable cost to a battery pack replacement). Those who are best able to afford the inevitable battery replacement will be more likely to buy new, not used. Next, the poor do actually exist and in far greater numbers than the well-to-do. The poor cannot now and probably not ever afford a hybrid new nor replace the battery in a used hybrid. That means that they will most likely be buying used conventionally powered vehicles.
The end result is that used hybrids will thus be more likely to end up in a junk yard sooner than their gasoline powered counterparts, negating any efforts to alter the percentage of hybrids on the roads in any lasting significant way.
Worth it? In a word, No.
And another point: notice how the marketing of hybrids has shifted. Due to their higher costs, which practically guarantees they are not worth the premium over conventional vehicles from an economic standpoint, hybrids are being pushed as having "more torque" instead of improving gas mileage. Add to that the fact that many people trade in for new every 2-3 years and any economic advantage disappears in a cloud of logic.
People are also traveling farther to work - and to find work - these days. Hybrids lose any MPG advantage on the highway.
There are many reasons hybrids CAN BE good cars to use. Economics is a miserably poor one.
We keep missing the real need here
A good second hand car is better value
Even when I replace tyres, clutch, brakes, steering etc. It doesn't cost more than a third of a new car.
I am a pensioner & don't do a great deal of milage. So it's horses for courses.
I guess it depends on your life style, milage & ego more than price.
Transcript
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>>Sumi Das: Before Jennifer Catel assumed spelling bought her hybrid, she drove an SUV that cost $75 to fill up.
>>Jennifer Catel: I thought, "This is not sustainable because I'm spending so much money on gas."
>>Sumi Das: Catel found a few cars she liked and started crunching numbers.
>>Jennifer Catel: I considered criteria like the purchase price, the fuel cost over the life of the car, the maintenance cost...
>>Sumi Das: If U.S. drivers switched to hybrid or electric vehicles, greenhouse gas emissions would drop 50%. Reducing your carbon footprint is a good reason to buy a hybrid, but is it finically smart? Here are the calculations you need to make. First, determine the cost of the hybrid and gas engine cars you're considering. We compared a Toyota Prius IV and the Honda Civic EX-L. The Prius is about $3,000 more.
>>You've got to decide if the mileage benefit on the Prius is going to work in your driving conditions. That's how you get back what we call the "Hybrid penalty."
>>Sumi Das: If gas is on average $3.75 a gallon and you drive 15,000 miles a year, annual fuel cost for a Prius would be $1,125; for a Civic, fuel would run $1,938. In this case, the extra cost of the hybrid would be earned back in fuel savings within 3 years and 8 months. If you're driving conditions don't favor a hybrid but you're still keen to be green, there are gas engine cars like the Chevy Cruze, Ford Fiesta, and Focus that offer low emissions and good mileage.
>>That's not going to approach the 50-51 of a Prius, but it's at least in the same hemisphere. And then when you back into that, the fact that there's no additional cost for these gas engine cars, there's a lot of other benefit there that isn't just about pushing numbers on a spreadsheet.
>>Sumi Das: For SmartPlanet, I'm Sumi Das.
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