Toyota yesterday unveiled a "plug-in" hybrid car based on its popular Prius
model on Wednesday, saying it would test the fuel-saving vehicle on public roads
- a first for the industry.
But the world's biggest automaker said the car, called
the Toyota Plug-in HV, was not fit for commercialization since it uses
low-energy nickel-metal hydride batteries instead of lithium-ion batteries
believed to be a better fit for rechargeable plug-in cars.
|

A Toyota employee holds a plug at the unveiling of a plug-in hybrid car
in Tokyo
yesterday.
Reuters |
Unlike earlier gasoline-electric hybrids, which run on a parallel system
twinning battery power and a combustion engine, plug-in cars are designed to
enable short trips powered entirely by the electric motor, using a battery that
can be charged through an electric socket at home.
Many environmental advocates see them as the best available technology to
reduce gasoline consumption and global-warming greenhouse gas emissions, but
engineers say battery technology is still not up to storing enough energy for
long-distance travel.
"It's difficult to say when plug-in hybrids could be commercialized, since it
would depend largely on advances in battery technology," said Executive
Vice-President Masatami Takimoto, in charge of Toyota's powertrain technology.
The Toyota Plug-in HV, which will also be tested in the United States and
Europe, has a cruising range of just 13 km on one charge, even with its trunkful
of batteries.
Toyota, which launched the world's first mass-volume gasoline-electric hybrid
car, the Prius, in 1997, said it would test eight prototypes of the plug-in
hybrid to gather data on real-life driving over the next three years after
gaining government approval.
Agencies
(China Daily 07/26/2007 page9)