Skip to main content

Home/ Automotive Trends/ Group items tagged Energy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Bob Weed

U.S. Senate passes stimulus bill with $2 billion for plug-ins and batteries - 0 views

  •  
    The Senate bill includes a 30 percent manufacturing tax credit for renewable energy equipment, but it lacks the direct-payment provision sought by solar energy advocates. The Senate's bill also has money for batteries, plug-in hybrids and energy-efficiency homes.
Hans De Keulenaer

PR-GB.com... News from origin - Amerigon BSST Subsidiary Selected as Partner in U.S. De... - 0 views

  • Amerigon Incorporated , a leader in developing and marketing products based on advanced thermoelectric (TE) technologies, today announced that its subsidiary, BSST LLC, will partner in a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) project to develop a highly-efficient thermoelectric heating and cooling system for automobiles that will substantially reduce energy consumption, engine load and ultimately greenhouse gas emissions. The goal of the 36-month, up to $8.4 million project is to create a zonal heating and cooling system for automobiles that heats or cools the vehicle occupants, rather than the entire cabin and its components, thereby reducing the energy consumed by existing heating/cooling systems by one third.
Wee Lam Tay

Suppliers expect to benefit from tougher CO2 rules - Automotive News - 0 views

  •  
    CO2 solutions: What suppliers say will help reduce CO2 emissions * Fuel injection systems for diesel and gasoline engines * Exhaust after-treatment systems * Turbochargers * Reduced-diameter electrical cables; alternative metals, such as aluminum instead of copper, in cables * Electric steering * Hybrid powertrains * Vehicle energy management components, such as power electronics and energy storage units
Glycon Garcia

New Report Shows Hydrogen Vehicles Will Drive Change - 0 views

  •  
    Today, the National Hydrogen Association released a new report called the "Energy Evolution: An Analysis of Alternative Vehicles and Fuels to 2100." The Energy Evolution shows that a scenario which initially includes a mix of alternative vehicles, and is later dominated by hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicles sales is the only way to simultaneously cut U.S. greenhouse gas pollution by 80% below 1990 levels; reach petroleum quasi-independence by mid-century; and eliminate nearly all controllable air pollution by the end of the century. The report also shows that an expansion of hydrogen stations is more affordable than most people think.
Wee Lam Tay

Hybrid vehicles powered by non-conventional energy source will be the future trend! - 25 views

Emissions of greenhouse gases, mainly CO2, will go right through the ceiling in the next 20 years, unless we dramatically reduced energy consumption. The U.S. Department of Energy selected five ne...

Hybrid vehicle greenhouse emissions

started by Wee Lam Tay on 02 Dec 08 no follow-up yet
Hans De Keulenaer

Auto-News: Batteries - Electrifying Transport - 0 views

  • It is all about batteries. In my opinion batteries are the worst roadblock on the way to further spread of electric vehicles. The Li-Ion-battery as mentioned in the document "Conti-Li-Ion.doc" was shown on the IAA 2008 "Commercial Vehicles" It contains 2 kWh, has a voltage of 350 V and a power of 60 kW. It has a volume of 52 l and weighs 65 kg, all included. It contains an energy of 2 kWh. This is the energy content of 200 ml of gasoline. To get a satisfactory service life you can use only about 20 % of the capacity of the battery, e. g. between 60 and 80 % state of charge. Calculated in gasoline that is 40 ml, about a double schnaps (liquor), as we say in Germany. So all this ado with electro-motor-generator, DC/DC- and AC/DC-converters, controllers and so on serves only for shoving a double schnaps in and out of the battery. Of course you can do it several times, wheras the gasoline, which you take out of the tank is lost forever. But the calculation shows how far the capacity even of the most sophisticated batteries is from what would be really needed.
Hans De Keulenaer

Electrifying Transport - Home - 0 views

  • It is all about batteries. In my opinion batteries are the worst roadblock on the way to further spread of electric vehicles. The Li-Ion-battery as mentioned in the document "Conti-Li-Ion.doc" was shown on the IAA 2008 "Commercial Vehicles" It contains 2 kWh, has a voltage of 350 V and a power of 60 kW. It has a volume of 52 l and weighs 65 kg, all included. It contains an energy of 2 kWh. This is the energy content of 200 ml of gasoline. To get a satisfactory service life you can use only about 20 % of the capacity of the battery, e. g. between 60 and 80 % state of charge. Calculated in gasoline that is 40 ml, about a double schnaps (liquor), as we say in Germany. So all this ado with electro-motor-generator, DC/DC- and AC/DC-converters, controllers and so on serves only for shoving a double schnaps in and out of the battery. Of course you can do it several times, wheras the gasoline, which you take out of the tank is lost forever. But the calculation shows how far the capacity even of the most sophisticated batteries is from what would be really needed.
  • a) at an October 2008 plant visit at Mitsubishi in Osaka (IWCC-GA), Japan, I had the opportunity to drive myself the first electric car which will be commercially available on the Japanese market mid 2009 at a price of 30 k$ with the following key characteristics : -  Li-Ion battery capacity (in-out) 25 kWh -  Guaranteed battery life time 4 years -  Charge time 30 minutes on a 400 V supply for charge -  Useful range :  150 km in summer / 90 km in winter (battery and passenger        need warming) -  Major parking lots and shopping malls will offer charging for free in Japan  -  value of consumption is 1 L of gasoline for 100 km.
Hans De Keulenaer

BMW to use hydropower to manufacture Megacity electric car - SmartPlanet - 0 views

  •  
    "BMW will make its future electric car, the Megacity EV, using hydropower."
  •  
    BMW milking the PR machine on ev. What's next? The assistent of the manufacturing manager driving to the plant by bicycle? Employees eating in the cantine with cutlery from organic plastics. Prepare for endless releases.
Glycon Garcia

EERE News: DOE Offers $2.4 Billion to Support Next-Generation Electric Vehicles - 0 views

  •  
    DOE Offers $2.4 Billion to Support Next-Generation Electric Vehicles President Barack Obama announced on March 19 that DOE is offering up to $2.4 billion in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds to support next-generation plug-in hybrid electric vehicles and their advanced battery components. Of the $2.4 billion, $1.5 billion in grants will go to U.S. manufacturers to produce high-efficiency batteries and their components; $500 million in grants will go to U.S. manufacturers to produce other components needed for electric vehicles, such as electric motors; and $400 million will go towards projects that demonstrate and evaluate plug-in hybrids and other electric infrastructure concepts. When these plug-in hybrid vehicles are offered for sale, U.S. residents who purchase them will be able to claim a tax credit of up to $7,500. Building a plug-in hybrid vehicle industry in the United States will create tens of thousands of jobs and will reduce our nation's dependence on foreign oil.
1 - 17 of 17
Showing 20 items per page