http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/18867/story.htm

Ex-GM CEO makes "green" auto industry comeback

USA: December 3, 2002

ROCHESTER HILLS, Mich. - Nearly 10 years to the day after he was 
pushed out as chief of General Motors Corp. (GM.N), Bob Stempel 
shoveled a handful of dirt to break ground for a new plant in Ohio 
that could make him a key player in a more environmentally-friendly 
automotive industry.

Stempel, 70, could easily have retired to a comfortable life after 
his tenure as chairman and CEO of GM ended in October 1992 with a 
boardroom coup. But now as chairman of Energy Conversion Devices Inc. 
(ENER.O) he works 60 to 70 hours a week, and flies around the world 
to visit clients as he makes his case for battery-powered vehicles.

Stempel is betting that sales of hybrid cars and trucks, powered by 
conventional gasoline or diesel engines mated to an electric drive 
system, will grow in the coming years as companies seek more 
fuel-efficient vehicles.

In late October, Stempel ceremoniously kicked off construction of a 
170,000-square-foot plant in Springboro, Ohio, that will make enough 
nickel-metal hydride batteries to supply 50,000 to 60,000 vehicles a 
year.

Production at the plant, a joint venture between Chevron Texaco 
(CVX.N) and Energy Conversion Devices, is scheduled to start in the 
third quarter next year.

MOVING OFF THE FENCE

"People have been sort of on the fence about hybrid cars," Stempel 
told Reuters, his voice booming with excitement. "All of a sudden 
they are moving off the fence. We know that there's going to be 
enough solid business out there that we ought to get under way."

Currently there are only three hybrid gas-electric vehicles for sale 
in the U.S. market, all made by Japanese automakers Toyota Motor 
Corp. (7203.T) and Honda Motor Co. Ltd. (7267.T) - the Toyota Prius, 
the Honda Insight and a hybrid-version of the popular Honda Civic 
small car.

However, Stempel said that U.S. and European automakers are 
requesting prototypes for some test vehicles from his joint venture 
company, Texaco Ovonic Battery Systems.

Unlike pure electric vehicles, which take hours to recharge and have 
limited range, hybrid gas-electric vehicles recharge themselves and 
can travel as far as conventional cars and trucks.

Some so-called "soft" hybrids expected to be rolled out over the next 
two years shut the engine down when the vehicle idles or comes to a 
stop, such as at a traffic light, and quickly restart upon 
acceleration, also saving gasoline. Some will also have 110-volt 
outlets that can be used for power tools, which could appeal to 
construction workers.

Other hybrids, such as the Prius, Insight and Civic hybrid, have 
electric motors that provide extra power, thus improving fuel economy 
even more.

Because they use less fuel, hybrids produce less carbon dioxide, 
which is considered one of the prime greenhouse gases responsible for 
global warming.

BETTER MILEAGE, LOWER EMISSIONS

Stempel, an engineer by trade, was part of a team at GM that created 
the catalytic converter to clean vehicle emissions. He laughs now 
when recalling how he and his colleagues thought they had perfected 
the converter so it produced only "harmless" carbon dioxide.

"If we don't really control the emissions from personal 
transportation, the way the regulators are going to control it is to 
put limits on driving. Look what happened to Mexico City. There are 
days in Mexico City when you can't see," he said.

"I think once the public really gets used to (hybrids) there won't be 
any question that they're going to be pretty well accepted," Stempel 
said. By 2007, "we may be approaching 500,000 a year from all 
manufacturers here in North America."

Stempel said that automakers are moving ahead with plans that include 
his batteries, though he declined to give details, citing 
confidentiality agreements. The company is also testing some Toyota 
vehicles with its batteries to try to win business from Matsushita 
Battery, a unit of Japan's Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. 
(6752.T).

Matsushita and Stempel's company have been embroiled in a patent 
dispute. ECD has alleged that Matsushita, which supplies the 
batteries through a joint venture with Panasonic Electronics for the 
Toyota Prius, wrongfully obtained patents held by ECD. Matsushita has 
denied the charges.

Toyota intends to sell 300,000 hybrid vehicles a year by 2005, with 
most of the sales in North America. One of its next hybrid models 
will be a version of the Lexus RX 330, the upcoming replacement of 
the popular RX 300 SUV.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the U.S. automakers who are trailing the 
Japanese in the race for hybrid vehicles have played down their 
importance. John Smith, GM's vice president of field sales, service 
and parts, said that the ultimate goal for GM is for cars and trucks 
that run on fuel cells.

"Hybrids can never be an endgame because they have packaged in one 
vehicle two modes of power sources," Smith said. "There's a redundant 
system on board and by definition it's not the efficient engineering 
solution."

But Stempel's former company is also proceeding with plans for more 
hybrid vehicles. GM will launch hybrid full-size pickup trucks in 
2004 that use lead acid batteries, and is considering a hybrid sedan 
or sport utility vehicle in a few years that could use nickel metal 
hydride batteries, a spokesman said.

Story by Michael Ellis

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE


Biofuels at Journey to Forever
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
Biofuel at WebConX
http://webconx.green-trust.org/2000/biofuel/biofuel.htm
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