Brazilians love flex-fuel vehicles
 Cars allow drivers to run engines on gas or alcohol 
 By ALAN CLENDENNING
 Associated Press
 09/19/2004
 
http://www.delawareonline.com/newsjournal/business/2004/09/19brazilianslovef.html

 SAO PAULO, Brazil -- If it weren't for the TotalFlex logo on the new Gol
 subcompacts leaving a sprawling Volkswagen plant, the shiny cars would be
 indistinguishable from millions already on the road across Latin America. 

 But these Gols and other models produced by Fiat SpA and General Motors
 Corp. have modified engines that, given the high price of oil, are making
 Brazilians smile at the gas pumps. They run on gasoline, alcohol or any
 combination of the two, and now represent nearly 20 percent of the new cars
 sold in Brazil. 

 With alcohol - also called ethanol - selling at half the price of gas in South
 America's largest country, Brazilians who have bought 200,000 "flex-fuel"
 cars since their launch last year say deciding which fuel to use is a 
no-brainer.

 "Alcohol, all the time," said office manager Roseli Santana as she filled up 
her
 2004 subcompact GM Montana pickup at a Shell station in Sao Paulo, Brazil's
 largest city and home to 5 million cars. "I was using 52 reals [$17] of gas
 every week, now I'm paying 30 reals [$10] for the same amount, except it's
 alcohol." 

 Brazil hopes to export flex-fuel cars and technology around the world, and auto
 industry executives say interest from abroad is increasing. So far, Volkswagen
 has hosted delegations from Australia, China, England, India, Japan and South
 Africa. 

 "They want to know how it works," said Joao Alvarez Jr., the top engineering
 executive for Volkswagen's Brazil flex-fuel car lineup, which has the biggest
 market share. "Gasoline is going to run out someday, everyone knows that." 

 Engine and assembly line changes to make flex-fuel cars aren't complicated,
 though the cars come outfitted with a tiny gas-only tank under the hood
 smaller than a windshield wiper fluid reservoir. It's used to start the car on
 cold days just for a moment before automatically switching back to alcohol or
 whatever is in the main tank. 

 But mass exports of flex-fuel cars aren't likely in the near future, because no
 other country has an alcohol fuel production and distribution system as
 advanced as Brazil's. Virtually all the country's service stations offer 
alcohol. 

 The idea for nongas powered cars goes back to the 1970s fuel crisis, when
 Brazil's economy nose-dived, prompting the country's military dictatorship to
 launch a campaign to wean the country from expensive imported oil. 

 Government subsidies helped fund the design and manufacture of alcohol-only
 cars. They also supported a vast industry near Sao Paulo to cultivate sugar
 cane and refine it into alcohol, and an alcohol distribution network that 
spans a
 country nearly the size of the continental United States. 

 Millions of Brazilians switched to the alcohol-only cars in the 1980s, but a
 1989 shortage of alcohol left enraged motorists unable to fill up and drive 
their
 cars. Falling gas prices in the 1990s added to the end of the country's affair
 with alcohol-only cars. Last year's sales of alcohol-only cars represented only
 3.5 percent of new vehicle sales. 

 But flex-fuel car sales took off after the vehicles made it to showrooms last
 September, totaling 50,000 through the end of 2003. An additional 150,000
 were sold from January through June, the latest period for which figures are
 available. 

 Other nations like the United States are promoting a fuel mix consisting of 85
 percent alcohol and 15 percent gas, but experts say it will take years - if not
 decades - for true flex-fuel cars to be sold outside Brazil. 

 "The problem with these flex-fuel vehicles is they need to meet with an
 established infrastructure," said Cristoph Berg, a commodities analyst with
 F.O. Licht in Germany. "In the case of Brazil, the fuel was there first." 

 Some American cars can run on the alcohol-gasoline mix, known as E85, but
 it's hard to find at the pumps. Most of the efforts of carmakers in the United
 States on alternatives to gas has been focused on making and marketing
 hybrid cars with gas and electric engines. 

 Flex-fuel cars will grab an increasing share of the Brazilian auto market even 
if
 gas prices fall because buyers get a viable fuel choice they never had before,
 said Joao Leite, owner of the Autoinforme Web site focusing on Brazil's auto
 industry. 

 "If gas and alcohol are the same price, I'm still going to go for the flex 
because
 you never know what will happen in a year or two," he said. "You can't lose 
with
 a flex car." 

 Other big automakers, like Ford Motor Co., plan to start selling Brazilian
 flex-fuel cars this year. And GM recently upped the ante on fuel choice for
 Brazilians, offering a flex-fuel car that also runs on natural gas, widely
 available at the pumps in Brazil's biggest cities. 

 Brazilian drivers for years have hired mechanics to install natural gas
 conversion kits on their cars. But GM's compact Astra is the first to come with
 natural gas as a factory-installed option, with an extra tank for the fuel in 
the
 trunk. 

 After buying her flex-fuel pickup in January for $8,300, Santana experimented
 with mixes of alcohol and gas before settling on pure alcohol. The vehicle's
 performance is the same on both types of fuel, she says, though it gets 
slightly
 fewer miles to the gallon with alcohol. So far, she's saved about $200 on 
fuel. 

 Three of Santana's friends bought flex-fuel cars after she told them she will
 never go back to a gasoline-powered car, and only will buy gas for her pickup 
if
 the price drops significantly. 

 "I was a little worried about using the alcohol, but there's really no 
difference,"
 Santana said. "If it ends up costing the same price, maybe I'll just mix the
 two."
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