Hogwash!

Sadly, the big 3 U.S. automakers just don't seem to want change fast enough. The spewing of reasons: ' they don't yet have this technology or that battery ' are getting really old, really fast. The big question here is...what exactly is in the mind of the big 3 auto executives?
 
Tesla Motors can get over 200 miles to a full charge, or 100 miles on a partial charge, with their Tesla Roadster, a vehicle that is being produced and sold. 

H-Line Conversions takes H1 Hummers and turns these 8,000 lb. vehicles into ones that gets 45 mpg. They can even give you the choice of four different fuels all in one vehicle!

GM had produced a very popular California vehicle (EV1) in the 1990's that got far far better than the 40 mp(charge) planned for the 2010 Volt...and it did so using regular lead-acid batteries!

Henry Ford produced electric cars before the combustion engine.

We know that an inventor back in 2006 who has made his car run on H2O!!!  A Japanese company has taken the idea up and made it producible. 

At a time when the USA and the world is in the great global recession, this is the time when automakers could be forgiven for their blatant mis-steps of the past. They could use technology and the simplicity of electric drive to populate the country with all new economical, smog-free, earth-friendly vehicles. Don't tell us that you don't have the technology or the right battery. Hog Wash!







GM Sells Advanced Battery to Stifle Popularity of Electric Vehicle (EV1)


GM refused to sell the EV1 Electric Car, they would only lease them. When the lease was up, they 
took all the cars back for immediate destruction. Some where crushed, others shredded in junk yards.


Before Henry Ford introduced his Model T gasoline powered car, many of the early 1900’s American “horseless carriages” were electric, running on lead acid batteries that are still very popular today. The century-old electric cars were very reliable, with few moving parts. They were easy and inexpensive to build, AND very easy to operate – Many were owned by well-to-do women. The old turn of the century electric car newspaper ads often appealed to high society women. The old electric cars didn't go very far or fast, but they were reliable and just fine for local community drives on a nice day.






























After World War II, the French railroad infrastructure was destroyed. As a patriotic national effort, they decided to rebuild their railroads with modern electric power. Today, the French railroad system is a model of on-time efficiency, moving millions of passengers and freight quickly and efficiently at minimal cost. Around 2007 A hybrid electric train built by Bombardier just took its inaugural trip in France. Diesel locomotives have always been a kind of hybrid -- their diesel engines charge batteries which power a gigantic electric motor. But this new train can run on electric power from any source available (not just the engine.) The trains will be charged with grid power, and will produce roughly 20% less CO2 than non-hybrid versions. Already, France has ordered 144 of the hybrid locomotives for placement throughout its rail system. Admittedly, here in America, we'd be happy to see any mass transit at all, let alone extra-efficient transit. But we can still be happy for the French and their new spiffy engines.




GM Must Re-Make the Mass Transit System it Murdered

by Harvey Wasserman

Bail out General Motors?  The people who murdered our mass transit system?

First let them remake what they destroyed.

GM responded to the 1970s gas crisis by handing over the American market to energy-efficient Toyota and Honda.

GM met the rise of the hybrids with "light trucks."

GM built a small electric car, leased a pilot fleet to consumers who loved it, and then forcibly confiscated and trashed them all.

GM now wants to market a $40,000 electric Volt that looks like a cross between a Hummer and a Cadillac and will do nothing to meet the Solartopian needs of a green-powered Earth.

For this alone, GM's managers should never be allowed to make another car, let alone take our tax money to stay in business.

But there is also a trillion-dollar skeleton in GM's closet.

This is the company that murdered our mass transit system.

The assertion comes from Bradford Snell, a government researcher whose definitive report damning GM has been a vehicular lightening rod since its 1974 debut.  Its attackers and defenders are legion.  But some facts are irrefutable:

In a 1922 memo that will live in infamy, GM President Alfred P. Sloan established a unit aimed at dumping electrified mass transit in favor of gas-burning cars, trucks and buses.

Just one American family in 10 then owned an automobile.  Instead, we loved our 44,000 miles of passenger rail routes managed by 1,200 companies employing 300,000 Americans who ran 15 billion annual trips generating an income of $1 billion.  According to Snell, "virtually every city and town in America of more than 2,500 people had its own electric rail system."

But GM lost $65 million in 1921.  So Sloan enlisted Standard Oil (now Exxon), Philips Petroleum, glass and rubber companies and an army of financiers and politicians to kill mass transit.

The campaigns varied, as did the economic and technical health of many of the systems themselves.  Some now argue that buses would have transcended many of the rail lines anyway.  More likely, they would have hybridized and complemented each other.

But with a varied arsenal of political and financial subterfuges, GM helped gut the core of America's train and trolley systems. It was the murder of our rail systems that made our "love affair" with the car a tragedy of necessity.

In 1949 a complex federal prosecution for related crimes resulted in an anti-trust fine against GM of a whopping $5000.  For years thereafter GM continued to bury electric rail systems by "bustituting" gas-fired vehicles.

Then came the interstates.  After driving his Allied forces into Berlin on Hitler's Autobahn, Dwight Eisenhower brought home a passion for America's biggest public works project.  Some 40,000 miles of vital eco-systems were eventually paved under.

In habitat destruction, oil addiction, global warming, outright traffic deaths (some 40,000/year and more), ancillary ailments and wars for oil, the automobile embodies the worst ecological catastrophe in human history.

Should current General Motors management be made to pay for the ancient sins of Alfred Sloan?

Since the 1880s, American corporations have claimed human rights under the law. Tasking one now with human responsibilities could set a great precedent.

GM has certainly proved itself unable to make cars that can compete while healing a global-warmed planet.

So let's convert the company's infrastructure to churn out trolley cars, monorails, passenger trains, truly green buses.

FDR forced Detroit to manufacture the tanks, planes and guns that won World War 2 (try buying a 1944 Chevrolet!).  Now let a reinvented GM make the "weapons" to win the climate war and energy independence.

It demands re-tooling and re-training.  But GM's special role in history must now evolve into using its infrastructure to restore the mass transit system---and ecological balance---it has helped destroy.