TruckingInfo FUEL SMARTS Eaton Confirms its Discontinued - TopicsExpress



          

TruckingInfo FUEL SMARTS Eaton Confirms its Discontinued Diesel-Electric Hybrid September 3, 2014 Utilities were a popular application for the Eaton diesel-electric hybrid. Eaton has confirmed that its out of the diesel-electric hybrid business in North America, after government incentives and stabilizing diesel prices contributed to a market largely drying up. Font Size AAA Jim Michels, global business communications manager for Eatons vehicle group, told HDT on the eve of a press event at its facilities in Kalamazoo, Mich. We are no longer selling hybrid units in North America, Michels said. The reason were not selling in North America any longer is there really isnt a market for those products. If the market comes back well re-enter. The market started drying up when federal credits expired, Michels explained. We began to see a downturn in orders and its progressively gotten lower and lower. Diesel prices that have stabilized as well as an increased interest in natural gas as an alternative fuel have contributed to the decline in demand. On the flip side our hybrid business in China is doing fantastic, Michels said. City bus is a huge opportunity for us in china, and same thing in Europe. Michels wouldnt speculate on what it might take to see demand increase enough to re-enter the market. We stay close to our customers and obviously if we see customer demand starting to pick back up well get right back into it. Both Daimler Trucks North America and Kenworth recently told HDT they were no longer building any new diesel-electric hybrids because they could no longer get the systems from their supplier – Eaton. Other companies are venturing into the medium-duty commercial truck hybrid market, many with bolt-on conversion systems, including Odyne and BAE HybriDrive, and Hino offers a hybrid version of its Class 5 cabover. A hybrid history In 2002, Eaton announced it intended to become a primary supplier of hybrid-electric vehicle powertrain technology and products to the commercial vehicle industry. That year, FedEx Express chose three finalists - including Eaton - to participate in its search for a hybrid electric Class 4 step-van to become its delivery truck in 2004. By 2003, FedEx had chosen Eaton as the supplier and agreed to order 20 of the hybrids. In 2005, electric utility Commonwealth Edison announced it was testing new diesel-electric hybrid bucket trucks from International using Eatons technology. In 2006, Paccar announced an ambitious goal of 30 percent improvement in vehicle fuel efficiency for selected medium-duty applications over the next seven years using hybrid technology as a key contributor, and Eaton was chosen to provide hybrid power systems for 50 step-van delivery vehicles made by International Truck and Engine and Freightliner Custom Chassis Corp., to be purchased by UPS. By spring of 2010, Eaton announced that it had more than 2,400 hybrid systems in use, with customers collectively accumulating more than 30 million miles of service throughout the world, and UPS expanded its alt-fuel fleet with the deployment of 200 next-generation hybrid electric delivery trucks in eight U.S. cities. The same year, Frost & Sullivan said that demand for hybrid trucks was expected to grow over the next six years across North America and Europe, especially in medium-duty, predicting the number of hybrid trucks being manufactured in North America and Europe would grow from 4,100 units in 2009 to 222,000 in 2016. In 2010, Frost & Sullivan predicted that by 2015, hybrids would represent 8% of all Class 6 to 8 trucks manufactured. However, as Frost & Sullivans Sandeep Kar noted at the time, Currently, the high upfront cost associated with hybrids is countered with federal grants, incentives, and tax rebates, said Kar. Although such incentives offer relief in the short term, for hybrids to be commercially viable in the long term, the upfront cost difference should reduce considerably. By the end of 2010, Eaton said customers of its hybrid systems had collectively accumulated more than 100 million miles of service, and had cumulatively saved 4 million gallons and 40,000 metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions. In 2011, Pike Research forecast that hybrid medium and heavy-duty truck sales would surpass 100,000 vehicles annually by 2017. By mid 2012, however, Eaton was addressing the issue of return on investment, announcing enhancements it said would increase the fuel economy, performance and payback of its hybrid drive system for commercial trucks, including a new high-capacity battery. The same year, a report from Indiana Universitys School of Public and Environmental Affairs said the fuel savings and environmental benefits from medium-duty diesel-electric hybrids might not be enough to recover their higher investment costs. Sign Up For E-Newsletter Sign up to receive targeted news and information for the entire fleet industry. Sign Up Sign Up Comments Name: Email: Comment: Post Comment Post Comment Recent News I-64 Closures Expected to Affect St. Louis Drivers Big Judgement Against Carrier Over Deadly 2011 Nevada Train Crash Quantum Sells CNG Systems to Bulk Carrier Economic Watch: Factory Shipments, Orders Hit Record Highs Report: New Truck Technologies Can Dramatically Cut Fuel Bills Latest News Articles Blogs Photos Videos Equipment Fleet Management Safety/Compliance Drivers Maintenance Fuel Smarts Aftermarket © TruckingInfoMobile | Desktop
Posted on: Thu, 04 Sep 2014 11:21:42 +0000

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