Better mileage than a Prius?
Not so fast
VW's new diesel-powered hybrid gets great mileage
Better than Toyota's top-selling hybrid.
Its' price-tag is another story.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- It was bound to happen - the Toyota Prius could
soon lose its crown as the most fuel-efficient
car on the market. But you might want to hold off before you cancel your
order.
The VW Golf TDI Hybrid gets 69 miles per gallon in the European fuel economy
test cycle, according to Volkswagen.
Toyota claims 54 mpg for the Prius in the same test.
Volkswagen unveiled a Golf hatchback in Europe this week that gets even
better mileage than the Prius.
It's a concept vehicle for now, but the diesel-powered hybrid indicates something
that's in the "near term future" for
European customers, a VW spokesman said.
Customers in the U.S. would have to wait a little longer, but a car like
this could eventually be sold here.
It's easy to understand why the Golf gets 26% better mileage than a Prius,
which burns gasoline.
The Golf TDI hybrid has a diesel engine, which is more efficient.
A non-hybrid 2006 Volkswagen Jetta diesel sedan gets 33 mpg in combined
city and highway driving, according to
current EPA estimates. A 2007 Toyota Camry Hybrid, a similarly-sized car,
gets just one mile per gallon more.
And the Jetta diesel gets much better highway fuel economy - 38 mpg - than
the Camry Hybrid's 34 mpg.
You may wonder why no one thought of the diesel/hybrid combination before.
Check your wallet
Diesel engines burn fuel using high pressure and heat instead of a spark.
The engines have to be more rugged to
withstand the strain, so they're more expensive to build.
Chrysler has a small test-fleet of plug-in diesel hybrid Dodge Sprinter
vans in commercial use today, but the technology is
too pricey to put into passenger vehicles, said Chrysler spokesman Nick Cappa.
With new ultra-clean diesel fuel now readily available at American gas stations
and new exhaust-cleaning technology in cars,
various automakers hope to introduce a new generation of clean-diesel cars
here over the next couple of years.
Like hybrids, these new diesels will be more expensive than similar gas-powered
cars.
The mark-up may not be quite as much, though.
Volkswagen estimates that the 2009 Jetta diesel will cost about $2,000 more
than the gas-powered version.
Official pricing hasn't been announced yet, though.
(2006 was the last time VW sold diesel cars in the U.S.)
Manufacturers almost always add unrelated equipment to hybrids, so it's
difficult to estimate a cost, but hybrids usually
cost at least $2,500 more than non-hybrid versions of the same vehicle.
Add those numbers altogether, and a hybrid diesel would be dauntingly expensive,
even if federal tax incentives were
factored in.
Buyers could also lose another big cost benefit: excellent resale value.
Diesel engines last longer than gas engines so diesel cars are worth more
after years of driving.
Hybrids, on other hand, generally do worse than other cars in resale value,
according to Kelley Blue Book.
Combine a hybrid and a diesel, and its resale value is anybody's guess.
For now, the Golf TDI Hybrid comes closest to making sense in Europe. Diesel
fuel generally costs less than gas there,
adding to the financial benefit of greater fuel efficiency. And European
regulations don't require all the pricey
emission-cleaning technology needed to sell diesels in the U.S.
That's why diesels make up more than half of new car sales in Europe.
If a diesel hybrid is a hit in Europe, and VW were to ramp up production,
that could bring down the per-unit costs.
And that could open the door to selling such a car in the United States.
By that time, U.S. consumers should be familiar with VW's - and other companies'
- new diesels.
And if any company could make it work in the United States, it would be
VW.
Even though they're not currently sold here, VW's diesels still have a strong
cult following, it's like
"I don't care what anyone else thinks, I love my diesel car."