TOKYO: Toyota Motor Corporation has scrapped plans for widespread
sales of a new all-electric minicar, saying it had misread the market
and the ability of still-emerging battery technology to meet consumer
demands.
Reuters reported that Toyota, which had already taken a more
conservative view of the market for battery-powered cars than rivals
General Motors Company and Nissan Motor Company, said it would only sell
about 100 battery-powered eQ vehicles in the United States and Japan in
an extremely limited release.
The automaker had announced plans to sell several thousand of the
vehicles per year when it unveiled the eQ as an pure-electric variant of
its iQ minicar in 2010.
“Two years later, there are many difficulties,” Takeshi Uchiyamada,
Toyota’s vice chairman and the engineer who oversees vehicle
development, told reporters on Monday.
By dropping plans for a second electric vehicle in its line-up,
Toyota cast more doubt on an alternative to the combustion engine that
has been both lauded for its oil-saving potential and criticized for its
heavy reliance on government subsidies in key markets like the United
States.
“The current capabilities of electric vehicles do not meet society’s
needs, whether it may be the distance the cars can run, or the costs, or
how it takes a long time to charge,” said, Uchiyamada, who spearheaded
Toyota’s development of the Prius hybrid in the 1990s.
Toyota said it was putting its emphasis on that technology, an area
in which it is the established leader. Toyota said on Monday it expected
to have 21 hybrid gas-electric models like the Prius in its line-up by
2015. Of that total, 14 of the new hybrids will be all-new, the
automaker said.
Toyota has previously said that it expects to have a hybrid variant
available for every vehicle it sells. In a gas-electric hybrid like the
Prius, a battery captures energy from the brakes to provide a supplement
to the combustion engine, boosting overall mileage, particularly in
stop-and-go city traffic.
Pure electric vehicles, like the Nissan Leaf, carry only lithium-ion
batteries. Consumer demand for the vehicles has been capped by their
limited range and the relatively high cost of the powerful batteries
they require.
The decision to drop plans for more extensive rollout of its eQ city
car leaves Toyota with just a single pure EV in its line-up. The
automaker will launch an all-electric RAV4 model in the United States
that was jointly developed with Tesla Motors.
Toyota expects to sell 2,600 of the electric-powered sports utility
vehicle over the next three years. By comparison, Toyota sold almost
37,000 Camry sedans in August alone in the United States, the
automaker’s largest market.
Toyota is also far from its plug-in hybrid sales target. The
automaker planned to sell between 35,000 and 40,000 Prius plug-in
hybrids in 2012 in Japan. So far it has sold only 8,400, or about 20 per
cent of its target.
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