Posts Tagged ‘power’


Look who’s driving world auto sales now | Business Agenda

Gas prices that hover near $4 a gallon may have Americans questioning their love affair with their cars. But in the rest of the world, millions of upwardly mobile people are just beginning to feel four-wheeled “first love.”

Whether it’s a Muscovite driving a Chevy Niva or a resident of Mumbai purchasing her first Tata Nano, the demand for cars is skyrocketing. It took a century for the world to get to 500 million passenger vehicles on the roads. In the next 20 years, that number is expected to double to 1 billion, according to a recent report from J.D. Power and Associates.

The demand will come largely from the so-called emerging markets, led by Brazil, Russia, India and China. Already last year, for the first time ever, consumers in those nations bought more than half of the autos and light trucks sold in the world. Except for the United States and Canada, Chevrolet’s top 10 markets last year were all emerging nations.

That growth abroad has ramifications for American consumers. In the near term, it means more auto exports for U.S. and other established automakers. Thus, styling in the future may be driven by consumers in those nations, rather than by the tastes and preferences of U.S. drivers. In the long term, Americans may be choosing between a General Motors and a Chinese-made Geely.

There’s still “a fairly big gap” between South Korea, the latest country to storm the U.S. market, “and whoever the next big player might be,” says Bill Visnic, analyst and senior editor at Edmunds.com, an online auto research hub based in Santa Monica, Calif. But “China in particular has a really strong emphasis on improving their automobile manufacturing capabilities.”

The focus on China’s auto industry is particularly intense because of its market potential. In 2009, China passed the United States to become the world’s biggest auto market. By 2020, car sales in that Asian giant are expected to be double those in the United States.

That represents a huge opportunity for established automakers. While GM has been interring brands in North America (R.I.P., Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Geo, Hummer and Saturn), it’s been creating new ones in China, including Jiefang, a truck brand, and Wuling commercial vehicles, which join familiar nameplates such as Chevrolet, Cadillac and Buick. Volkswagen’s stated goal of becoming the world’s largest automaker by 2018 depends heavily on its success in these emerging markets, especially China.

China is hardly the only story. India’s Tata Motors has made a bold move to upgrade Indian commuters from their bicycles and motor scooters into low-cost cars designed and made domestically. The Tata Nano, a basic minicar that sells for about $3,000, has had a rocky debut, including a few that have burst into flames.

The Nano “has had quality problems, they’ve had legal problems … they’ve had a number of things go wrong,” says Alan Baum, principal of Baum & Associates in West Bloomfield, Mich., a market research firm specializing in the auto industry. “But [Tata] will get it right. [It's] a global company that is up to world standards.”

In Russia, well-known global brands are coming in to form joint ventures with Russian companies or going it alone, Baum says. “They’ve kind of left in the dust the Russian companies” such as Lada, which he calls “not quite ready for prime time.” Chevrolet sold 116,233 vehicles in Russia last year, up from 104,398 in 2009. The Chevrolet Niva is one of the most popular foreign models there.

The Brazilian market, dominated by European automakers, is also booming. Sales soared more than 10 percent in 2010 over 2009 to 3.3 million, the fourth straight year of increases.

While much of the world’s new middle class will be sliding behind the wheel of their first Ford or Volkswagen, it’s not clear when U.S. drivers will do the same with emerging-market nameplates.

The Chinese “thought they were going to do what the South Koreans did, [only] in a lot shorter time, and they’ve realized maybe it’s not that easy,” Baum says. With only 1 car per 40 people in China (compared with 1 per 1.2 people in the United States), there’s plenty of pent-up domestic demand for China’s automakers. “They’re practicing on themselves” before they enter the U.S. market, he says.

When demand for cars in China cools, “as it’s starting to do now, then I think they’ll look outside of China,” says Jeff Schuster, executive director of global forecasting at J.D. Power. There’s “no question” that China will be the next major player in the U.S. market, Schuster says. Chinese-made cars could be on U.S. roads in as little as five years.

Still, the Chinese must leap a daunting set of hurdles, including establishing a dealer network (or, more likely, partnering with an established brand), complying with U.S. safety regulations, and meeting U.S. consumer expectations for quality and features.

Thus, some of the first emerging-market vehicles to head to the United States in any appreciable numbers may come from Brazil and Argentina, which have strong sales of small trucks, a market that U.S.-based manufacturers have ignored in recent years, Visnic says.

Some of these home-grown automakers own foreign brands: China’s Geely (Volvo), China’s Hawtai Motor Group ($222 million invested in Saab) and India’s Tata (Land Rover and Jaguar). But Chinese- or Indian-made imports to the United States might not arrive under these luxurious brand names.

“You want to be careful,” Visnic says. “These brands are premium brands. There’s only so far down the price ladder that you want to extend a brand that has a premium history and reputation.”

What we’re seeing now, Baum says, is the tail wagging the dog. The Buick LaCrosse was developed in large part to make it attractive to Chinese, not American, buyers. “Buick is now designing a lot of its products with China in mind,” he says, “and then saying, ‘OK, now, what do we do to change them for North America and for Europe?’ ” Click to write a comment or read comments about this post. MinnPost.com Full RSS Articles brought to you by: MinnPost Young Professionals Network EDAM Summer Conference scholarships available to young pros

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Google spends $160m on solar plant

GOOGLE helps build the world’s biggest solar power plant to generate enough energy to “take more than 90,000 cars off the road”.

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Supreme Court to decide states and private groups’ right to sue polluters

Tom Ramstack – AHN News Legal Correspondent

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments April 19 in a case that will decide whether states and private groups can sue utilities for their greenhouse gas emissions.

Additional legal briefs are due Monday in the case of American Electric Power Co. v. Connecticut, which already was joined by seven other states, New York City and three land trusts.

They are suing five utilities, saying they created a “public nuisance” by violating federal Clean Air Act limits on their emissions.

Environmentalists say the Supreme Court’s decision on whether states, cities and private groups even have a right to sue will have a dramatic effect on the nation’s efforts to stop global warming.

A decision saying public interest groups and local governments can sue is likely to unleash a flood of lawsuits that would increase the courts’ authority over emissions.

A ruling for the utilities would mean only the federal government can clamp down on how they operate.

The environmentalists already have won before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in a 2009 ruling.

The power companies appealed to the Supreme Court. A decision is expected by July.

New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman filed a brief for New York City and state governments of California, Connecticut, Iowa, Rhode Island and Vermont.

“Climate change threatens our economy, our health and our natural resources,” Schneiderman said. “This lawsuit protects New Yorkers and our environment from the serious harms caused by unrestrained greenhouse gas pollution. As some of the biggest global warming polluters in the country, these five companies produce 10 percent of the nation’s carbon dioxide emissions. To protect our future, we must have the right to hold these polluters accountable in a court of law.”

Utilities named in the lawsuit are American Electric Power Co., Cinergy Corp., Southern Co., the Tennessee Valley Authority and Xcel Energy Inc.

Two states – New Jersey and Wisconsin – have dropped out of the lawsuit since the dispute started in 2004.

Three land trusts, the Audubon Society of New Hampshire, Open Space Institute and Open Space Conservancy, also are suing the utilities.

Business groups, such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and major oil companies, are staunchly opposed to broader court authority over pollution.

They said in amicus briefs that judges would enforce a patchwork of rulings against them that ultimately would hurt businesses and the nation’s economy.

American Electric Power Co. made the same kind of argument in its brief, which says allowing public nuisance claims against utilities would authorize lawsuits “by anyone who claims to be affected by climate change against any source of greenhouse gas emissions. It would empower courts to determine the ‘reasonable’ level of global greenhouse gas emissions, allocate them among economic sectors, and order individual actors to conform their emissions to the court’s judgments.”

As a result, judges would be able to override authority that should rest with the Environmental Protection Agency, American Electric Power’s brief says.

The utility’s lawyers cited previous federal court rulings in saying, “These issues are wholly inappropriate for resolution by an unelected, unrepresentative judiciary … under the vague and indeterminate nuisance concepts of the common law.”

The Tennessee Valley Authority argues that allowing public nuisance lawsuits against polluters is impractical..

“… virtually every person, organization, company, or government across the globe also emits greenhouse gases, and virtually everyone will also sustain climate-change-related injuries,” the Tennessee Valley Authority’s brief says.

The EPA was set to announce new greenhouse gas reporting requirements for large polluters by March 31, but has delayed the date.

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Japanese Flee Area Near Nuclear Power Plant

After another explosion was reported at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, Japan’s prime minister announced that those living within about a 20-mile radius should stay inside their homes. But many did the exact opposite: They packed their cars or got into buses – and headed west.

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Japan’s Auto Plants Closed as Companies Take Stock

Japan’s automakers scrambled to determine whether they will be able to build and export cars in light of the rolling power blackouts electricity and the damage to country’s infrastructure.

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New Zealand quake survivors adapt to new miseries

In Christchurch, New Zealand, water and power supplies to thousands have been cut, and many people have been forced to sleep in their cars or tents as their unstable houses sway with the relentless aftershocks.

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Wheels: VW’s Take on the London Taxi

The automaker rethinks a city icon, with electric power.

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Schools in Ontario, Atlantic provinces close due to snowstorm

Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News News Writer

London, Ontario, Canada (AHN) – Schools in Ontario were closed again Wednesday following the snowstorm that battered the province. The affected schools are in London, Middlesex and Elgin counties as well as the University of Western Ontario and Fanshawe College.

Some of these areas got about a meter (39.4 inches) of snowfall, forcing residents to stay away from school and offices. The amount of snowfall in London the past two days is the equivalent of snowfall from December to March.

London Mayor Jose Fontana, however, said the situation does not warrant the declaration of a state of emergency in the city even if the cold weather conditions caused the paralysis of land transportation in parts of London.

In Eastern Canada, aside from snow, there were high winds and rains which caused not only the shuttering of schools but also inundation and a power outage on Monday.

Aside from partially flooded streets, Halifax and parts of Nova Scotia have collapsed power poles and lines. The power outage affected 30,000 customers in Nova Scotia and 2,500 in New Brunswick.

Water transport between Caribou in Nova Scotia and Wood Islands in Prince Edward Islands were cancelled and ferry schedules between Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador were disrupted.

Environment Canada forecast that the extreme cold weather alert will be lifted Thursday morning. The weather agency said it expects temperature of minus 4 degrees Celsius (24.8 Fahrenheit).

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Iran’s First Nuclear Power Plant Now Operational

Lawrence Mijares – AHN News Contributor

Bushehr, Iran (AHN) – After years of delays and postponement, Iran’s first nuclear power plant in Bushehr is now operational and will be supplying electricity to the whole of Iran.

Ali Akbar Salehi, Iran’s atomic energy chief, announced Saturday that the reactor was fueled and operational.

He added that all that is needed is to wait for the water in the reactor to heat up gradually and for further tests to be conducted before electricity could be supplied to Iran’s national electric grid in a month or two.

Construction on the reactor was initiated in the 1970s by Kraftwerk Union, a branch of the German company Siemens, but was halted and the contract rescinded by the Islamic revolution in 1979 and by the Iran-Iraq war.

Russians completed the reactor and were supposed to operate it in 1999 but were interrupted several times by mounting technological and financial challenges as well as by U.S. pressure.

In 2005, Russia agreed to instead supply Iran with nuclear power and take back all spent reactor fuel to enable the International Atomic Energy Agency to inspect the plant and assure that the nuclear waste wouldn’t be diverted elsewhere.

The first batch of nuclear fuel was delivered by Russia in 2007. It remains to be seen how the spent nuclear waste will be disposed of, or how operators might deal with the possible threat of a new computer virus attack similar to the sophisticated Stuxnet worm that was widely believed to have stalled the Iranian nuclear plant in recent months.

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Rosatom Head: Bulgaria’s Belene NPP to Return Investment Swiftly

Bulgaria’s future second nuclear power plant Belene will take less than 20 years to return the money invested in its construction, Sergey Kiriyenko, CEO of the Russian state nuclear energy corporation Rosatom, declared in Sofia. Kiriyenko arrived in the Bulgarian capital Saturday as part of the high-level Russian state delegation led by Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. Rosatom’s subsidiary, Atomstroyexport, has been selected to build the first two 1000-MW reactors of Bulgaria’s second nuclear power plant at Belene. …

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