Cars like 2010 Chevy Volt and Nissan LEAF cornered at 10% market share?
GM has taken a long time to bring a strong hybrid offering to market, and recently chairman Bob Lutz made it clear that the company’s decision to pursue hybrid cars is bittersweet. The 2010 Chevy Volt is a popular topic, made obvious by the amount of buzz streaming across the Internet and its already extensive waiting lists of orders.
With all of the positive publicity why then is Lutz down on hybrids? He says that GM loses money on many of its hybrids and will continue to do so in the intermediate future. Marring the future of hybrids further he also predicted that they will own a small piece of the overall car market, at 10% or less over the next 10 years!
That’s a cynical viewpoint, but perhaps based on some realistic experience. Lutz later said “for the next 10 years, that’s the way we see it! That would would be over 1.2 million units per year; at today’s price premium for plug-ins, that’s even an optimistic estimate, I think,” according to GM-Volt.
He also clarified later that he was referencing PHEV hybrids like the 2010 Chevy Volt and all electric vehicles like the Nissan LEAF. It seems that government requirements are driving a lot of GM’s research in hybrid vehicles, which wouldn’t be surprising considering how much money the company accepted in loans from the United States republic.
Related articles
GM may also be benefiting from Toyota’s recent battle with defective gas petals which created mass recalls and destroyed part of its bubble of perfection. Where consumers once considered Toyota the only viable source of hybrid cars with its Prius model, they now may be considering competitors more seriously.
Exact pricing on the Chevy Volt isn’t available yet but it’s expected to be around $40,000 with about $7,000 in tax credits. They will likely be in production by the end of November 2010 but most of those will be snapped up quickly so realistically an average consumer may not have a chance to get one until 2012.
Advertisement
Monthly archive
- July 2010 (31)
- June 2010 (30)
- May 2010 (29)
- April 2010 (30)
- March 2010 (30)
- February 2010 (27)
- January 2010 (31)
- December 2009 (30)
- November 2009 (31)
- October 2009 (35)
- September 2009 (27)
- August 2009 (30)

Comments
Well--first off, the Nissan Leaf is NOT a "hybrid". It is completely electric, so I had a good laugh at the title of this article. If you're going to write authoritative articles about this type of technology (or any tech-issue for that matter), get the vernacular correct. Calling all-electric cars hybrids....geez. The Chevy Volt keeps Big Oil happy by saddling in a small gas engine to "extend" its range, which is pathetic. The EV1 got almost 200 miles per charge back in 1998. Technically though, the Volt is all-electric as well, and Chevrolet even calls it one on its website. There is a lot of disinformation and confusion about transportation tech. Do your homework before posting.
Hello hughs005, thanks for your input! In the article the Nissan LEAF is clearly described as ". . . and all electric vehicles like the Nissan LEAF". The LEAF is commonly put in context of the hybrid category because it has characteristics that make it more fuel efficient, which is the spirit of what all hybrids are attempting to accomplish.
Regardless I appreciate your suggestion to be more specific with the title, and have adjusted accordingly.
Post new comment