Diesel gets unexpected boost at Detroit auto show

Tue Jan 15, 2008 9:31am EST
 
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By John Crawley

DETROIT (Reuters) - A fresh mandate from Washington for automakers to sharply increase fuel efficiency has given an unexpected boost to a historically unpopular alternative in the United States -- diesel.

The fanfare at the North American International Auto Show includes gasoline-electric "hybrids" to futuristic technologies like fuel cells, all geared to fight soaring pump prices and conquer what President George W. Bush has termed America's "addiction" to oil.

But diesel was also making a new pitch as a here-and-now option to make engines run more economically and pollute less.

Diesel, a conventional combustion approach long favored by Europeans, has been perennially stalled in the United States because of unacceptably high tailpipe emissions.

An oil-based product, diesel is widely available in Europe where gasoline is more expensive. But only a fraction of consumer vehicles outside of some luxury models, pickups and big trucks, use it on American roads.

"American consumers still have a negative impression of diesel," Takeo Fukui, chief executive of Honda Motor Co ((7267.T: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz)), told reporters at the show on Sunday.

But Fukui also said Honda's new line of "clean diesel" cars due to roll out in the U.S. in 2009 would make money from day one. The new system will clear the same emissions regulations as gasoline in the United States, Fukui said.

Advanced technology has spawned a cleaner burning diesel fuel and Honda and other foreign automakers are using the Detroit show to broaden its appeal for the U.S. market.  Continued...

 

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