Fuel Economy
Fuel Economy
The fuel economy of an automobile, measured in miles per gallon (MPG), is the distance it can move using one gallon of fuel. In 1975, in the midst of concerns about oil consumption, the U.S. Congress passed a law establishing the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards, which required an increase in the fuel economy of all new cars and light trucks starting in 1978. The law required that each manufacturer meet the same standard but that a manufacturer's cars and trucks be treated differently since trucks were primarily used for work at the time. It mandated an average fuel efficiency of 27.5 MPG for cars by 1985, roughly doubling car fuel economy over ten years. The car standard remains the same as of 2003. The law also directed the Department of Transportation (DOT) to establish a standard for light trucks, defined by the DOT to include sport utility vehicles (SUVs), minivans, and pickups. The DOT established a fuel economy standard of 20.5 MPG for light trucks by 1987, an increase of about 50 percent. Small changes in light truck standards were made thereafter, with the standard increasing to 20.7 by 1996 and then, in 2003, being set to increase to 22.2 MPG by 2007.
This government-driven improvement in fuel economy has helped to limit the increase in fuel use by the United States to 30 percent over the last twenty-five years, despite the fact that vehicle miles traveled have nearly doubled over that time. In 2000 the increased fuel economy of the U.S. car and truck fleet resulted in a savings of more than forty billion gallons of gasoline, representing a 25 percent reduction compared to what the demand would have been if fuel economy had not increased. This amounts to a savings of more than 430 million metric tons of carbon dioxide, the heat-trapping gasses that cause global warming.
Vehicle travel over the coming decades is projected to rise at nearly unprecedented rates, and fuel economy is not expected to improve sufficiently to compensate for this trend. Due mostly to the explosion in sales of SUVs and other light trucks for passenger travel, the average fuel economy of a new vehicle sold in the United States has actually been declining since 1987 and by 2002 was at a two-decade low of less than twenty-four MPG.
Many factors contribute to a vehicle's fuel economy, including aerodynamics, weight, tire inflation, and engine efficiency. Simple steps that can be taken by drivers, such as properly inflating and rotating tires and keeping engines properly tuned, can improve a vehicle's MPG. Conventional technology improvements, such as continuously variable transmission systems and the use of high-strength steel and aluminum, can also make a vehicle go farther on a gallon of gas, as can advanced engine technologies such as low-friction, variable vale control engines. These and other conventional technologies can increase fuel economy by 40 to 70 percent.
Even larger improvements in fuel economy can be achieved by combining conventional technology improvements with hybrid electric technology. Hybrid electric vehicles obtain driving power from both a gasoline or diesel engine and an electric motor/battery system. When combined with conventional technology improvements, hybrids can achieve more than a doubling of today's car and truck fuel economy. As of 2003 every major automaker had either put into production or announced the planned production of at least one hybrid car or truck in small volumes.
The issue of fuel economy is a controversial one, and is directly linked to the economic and environmental costs of U.S. passenger vehicle travel. In 2000, American drivers consumed over 120 billion gallons of gasoline at a total cost of more than $185 billion, and passenger vehicles accounted for 40 percent of the oil products that the nation consumed. Cars and trucks are also the largest single source of smog-forming air pollution in most urban areas. Most of this pollution comes from a vehicle's tailpipe, but emissions from fuel production and delivery, so-called "upstream emissions," are also a problem.
Also involved in the debate over fuel economy standards is global warming. The production, transportation, and use of gasoline for cars and light trucks in 2000 resulted in over one-fifth of the U.S. emission of the heat-trapping gases that scientists say are contributing to global warming. In the year 2000, U.S. cars and trucks emitted more of the heat trapping gasses that cause global warming than the individual emissions from every country other than the U.S., China, Russia, and Japan from all sources combined.
Supporters of increased fuel-economy standards say that if the mileage performance of the U.S. fleet of light trucks and cars was improved, it would help reduce the cost to drivers at the gas pump, the economic and military risks resulting from our nation's reliance on foreign oil, changes to the global climate, and would improve consumer choice. Those opposed to significant increases in fuel economy say that the auto industry could not economically withstand the cost of technology improvements to their fleets, consumers are not interested in better fuel economy and consumer choice would be reduced, and that better alternatives exist, such as increasing gasoline taxes. Both sides of the debate also raise opposing perspectives on the safety impacts of changes to fuel economy standards.
see also
Energy Efficiency;
Vehicular Pollution.
David Friedman
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Time stands still for memories of good times, romatic memories.(SunBurst)
Newspaper article from: Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL); 4/28/2000; 700+ words
; ...wanted for one admission. Live theater was a treat, and prices were within reason. The earliest I remember was Minnie Maddern Fiske in one of her farewell tours as Mrs. Malaprop in "The Rivals." I learned firsthand what a malapropism was...
|
|
ASK THE GLOBE
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 1/26/2001; 354 words
; ...s degree in botany at the University of Chicago and a master's at Columbia. But summer vacations with the Minnie Maddern Fiske acting troupe aboard Ohio River boats attracted him to the theater. He was also a folksinger and lifelong friend...
|
|
THE PAST 100 YEARS.(Editorials)
Newspaper article from: The Santa Fe New Mexican (Santa Fe, NM); 1/12/2009; 362 words
; ...daughter of Associate Justice Abbott of Albuquerque, has entered upon the dramatic stage and is a member of Miss Minnie Maddern Fiske's theatrical troupe. She has a part in the new play, The Salvation Girl which is now playing at the Bijou Theater...
|
|
The meaning behind the lines: how Ibsen's toughness and Chekhov's tenderness transformed American playwriting and acting.(Theater)(Henrik Ibsen and Anton Chekhov)(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: American Scholar; 6/22/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...New York production had lasted more than a month until Nazimova showed Americans what all the fuss was about. Minnie Maddern Fiske, who had starred in the Broadway premiere of Hedda Gabler in 1903, saw Hedda as "a poor, empty little Norwegian...
|
|
Campaign on to restore Pittsfield's Colonial glory
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 9/4/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...Paderewski, Sergei Rachmaninoff, and Amelita Galli-Curci played and sang there, and actors like Maude Adams, Mrs. Minnie Maddern Fiske, John Drew, John Barrymore and Ethel Barrymore, George Arliss, and E. H. Sothern trod its boards, and Anna...
|
|
Tributes to a Film Genius: Brave and Ruthless Chaplin.(Culture)
Newspaper article from: The New York Observer (New York, NY); 7/31/2006; 700+ words
; ...anthology. A similar volume called Focus on Chaplin (1971) covers some of the same ground: Both books reprint Minnie Maddern Fiske's appreciation from 1916, as well as pieces by Edmund Wilson (superb), George Jean Nathan (ridiculous...
|
|
The Salvation Lass, her harlot-friend, and slum realism in Edward Sheldon's Salvation Nell (1908).(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Theatre History Studies; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...Kitchen showed men swigging real beer, prostitutes soliciting men, and star-actress Minnie Maddern Fiske scrubbing the bar (fig. 1). Long remembered for Fiske's pioneering realistic acting in the title role, Salvation Nell significantly influenced...
|
|
Contemporary Approaches to Ibsen, vol. 7.
Magazine article from: Scandinavian Studies; 6/22/1993; ; 700+ words
; ...have played Nora, in which she treats especially Ruth Gordon, Claire Bloom, Liv Ullman, Alla Nazimova, and Minnie Maddern Fiske ("the most important Nora in American stage history," 127). The remainder of the essays cover a wider variety...
|
|
JULIE HAYDON, 84; `GLASS MANAGERIE' STAR.(CAPITAL REGION)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 12/29/1994; 557 words
; ...that was based on Williams' sister. Miss Haydon was born in Oak Park, Ill. When she was 19, she toured with Minnie Maddern Fiske in ``Mrs. Bumpstead Leigh.'' Two years later, she played Ophelia in a production of ``Hamlet'' at the...
|
|
Minnie Maddern Fiske
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Minnie Maddern Fiske The first important "realistic" actress in the United States, Minnie Maddern Fiske (1865-1932) became known primarily...the Norwegian playwright Ibsen. Minnie Maddern Fiske was born Mary Augusta Davey in New...
|
|
Fiske, Minnie Maddern
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
Fiske, Minnie Maddern [ Marie Augusta Davey ] (1865–...3 under her mother's maiden name of Maddern, and at 5 went to New York, where she...1890 on her marriage to Harrison Grey Fiske, writing several plays before returning...
|
|
Fiske, Mrs. Minnie Maddern
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Theatre
Fiske, Mrs. Minnie Maddern [ née Mary or...Theatre and of Lizzie Maddern, an actress, who first carried “Little Minnie Maddern” on stage at...married Harrison Grey Fiske and announced her retirement...
|
|
Maddern, Minnie
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
Maddern, Minnie, see FISKE .
|
|
Fiske, Harrison Grey
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Theatre
Fiske, Harrison Grey (1861–1942...1880 and he was made editor. In 1890 Fiske married Minnie Maddern, who had already developed a reputation...changed her professional name to Mrs. Fiske . As editor, Fiske had been a crusader...
|