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By Michelle Fleury
Business reporter, BBC News, Detroit auto show
It is not everyday that you hear a senior car executive call for higher petrol
prices.
What makes it even more surprising is that the comment was made by General
Motors' (GM) vice president Bob Lutz.
For years GM and Detroit's other two home grown car companies Ford and Chrysler
resisted calls to improve fuel consumption.
They argued it was not what customers wanted.
Last summer, when petrol prices in the US more than doubled, they discovered
they were wrong.
Now they are in the global race to see who can produce the most fuel efficient
cars with low emissions.
Drivers' choice
The problem is petrol prices have fallen back below $2 per gallon.
Which brings us back to Mr Lutz.
He does not believe mainstream customers will pay more for an environmentally
friendly car without an accompanying saving at the petrol pump.
"Even in a good economy, you're not going to get Americans to buy these cars if
petrol remains at $1.50 a gallon," he says.
"They're going to buy the biggest car they can afford the petrol for."
Hard sell
In describing the problem as he sees it he draws comparisons with battling
obesity.
"If you want to fight national obesity," he says, "you have to increase the
price of fatty foods. But the US won't do that so they force the clothing
manufacturers to produce only small sizes."
He may have a point.
At the Toyota stand they have been showing off their environmental credentials,
from the cars, to the recycled glass and the bamboo flooring used for their
display.
But falling petrol prices coupled with the economic downturn have hurt sales of
the Japanese car makers successful hybrid vehicle, the Prius.
Low emission cars may be good for the planet, but the technology they use is
more expensive and that cost gets passed on to customers.
The question is: if petrol prices in the US stay at their current levels, will
consumers be willing to pay more for the new Prius with its impressive 50 miles
per gallon when it comes out in 2010?
Electric future
Tesla Motors, which has been very successful at generating buzz for it's own
electric sports car, certainly hopes so.
The Silicon Valley company, which is also supplying batteries and chargers for
Daimler's new electric Smart car, hopes the government will inject money to
help it develop an electric family car.
Given the costs involved, the company's vice president Diarmuid O'Connell
thinks it makes sense for the government to offer tax incentives or other
breaks to encourage manufacturers to make more environmentally friendly cars.
"Whether it's in the US or in certain European markets, governments are
stepping up and are saying 'OK, we'll provide some sort of loan financing, loan
guarantee financing, something that doesn't unduly hurt the taxpayer but
something that keeps the momentum going'," he says.
In Washington they will be watching closely.
President-elect Barack Obama's team is considering whether to support battery
production in the US as part of any economic stimulus plan.
But until people start buying new cars again, the electric dream will remain
just that.