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Tag Archives: fuel-efficiency

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The goal is energy conservation. But what is the best way?

During the end of August, our newest fuel economy standards were announced. Now CAFE, our Corporate Average Fuel Economy mandate, is close to 29 miles per gallon. The goal is 35.5 for 2016 and 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025. So auto manufacturers have the incentive to produce hybrids, cars with more efficient gas mileage, electrified vehicles, lighter cars.

This takes us to the “rebound effect.” As we explained in a past Econlife post

“Citing the ‘rebound effect,’ a New Yorker Magazine article introduces us to {an 1865} book called The Coal Question…{which}explains that the energy efficiency created by the steam engine encouraged more energy use rather than less. {19th century economic thinker William} Jevons said, ‘It is wholly a confusion of ideas to suppose that the economical use of fuel is equivalent to a diminished consumption. The very contrary is truth.’”

What really makes us conserve? The law of demand. When prices rise, we are willing and able to buy less.

Or, as financial journalist Eduardo Porter explains, gas taxes are much better than CAFE because they make us drive less. Porter then describes what happens next, “When time came to replace the old family S.U.V., we would be more likely to consider a more fuel-efficient option. As more Americans sought gas-sipping hybrids, carmakers would develop more efficient vehicles.” For example, In the UK where the gas tax is $3.95 a gallon, Ford’s compact Fiesta goes 72 miles on a gallon. In the US, the number for the Fiesta is 33 MPG.

But, will you vote for a politician that supports higher taxes?

Sources and Resources: For the source of my Porter quote and much more detail on the cost benefit tradeoff between CAFE and gas taxes, this Porter article is excellent as is this New Yorker article that discusses the “rebound effect.” In addition, the specifics of CAFE standards are described further by the NY Times and an NHTSA press release.

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gasoline...nozzle..gas pump..15483_iStock_000006386775XSmall

With the price of gas marching skyward, more of us might become eco-drivers. Based on a report from the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute (UMTRI), here are some (slightly irreverent but accurate) rules for eco-driving:

  1. During warm weather, don’t use the air conditioner and don’t open the windows. At certain speeds, the wind is a drag that uses up more fuel.
  2. Occupy every seat with short skinny people. Weight and occupancy make a big difference.
  3. Avoid hills.
  4. Only drive on highways, preferably at 50 mph. Sort of like the porridge from Goldilocks and the Three Bears, driving too slowly and too fast use more fuel while a medium speed is just right.
  5. Don’t drive aggressively.
  6. Keep an eye on your oxygen sensor, your tires and your engine oil.

 

However, even if you violate every suggestion, by driving one of the most fuel efficient cars you will still receive a higher eco-driver rating than being eco-observant in the least fuel efficient cars.

So, what really counts? The car.

And this takes us to where economists always go: Incentive. Is price enough of an incentive to affect how and what we drive?

The Economic Lesson

Economists hypothesize that at more than $4.00 a gallon, we are close to a gasoline price that provides the incentive to conserve more and drive less. When buyers have a considerable response to a price change, economists say that their response is elastic. Our minimal reaction to the rising gasoline price indicates that thus far, our quantity demanded has been inelastic.

An Economic Question: If, in 1923, average mpg were 14.0, why has gas mileage not improved substantially since then?

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