Hybrid Cars Of The Future

Posted by Nick Niesen on October 27th, 2010

While hybrid energy vehicles are enjoying a surge in popularity, due to the slow decline in technology costs, hybrid cars of the future are going to have to meet some stringent demands of the consumer to continue growing. As prices for hybrid vehicles have remained higher than their gas-consuming counterparts, many car buyers are looking the other way when comes to saving the planet.

Spoiled, is the best term to describe American car owners as they continue their love affair with gas guzzling, large, comfortable and luxurious vehicles despite a rapid escalation in fuel prices. In order to be attractive to the masses, hybrid cars of the future are going to have to offer the same level of comfort and convenience as the non-hybrid versions without costing a ton more money. People may be willing to help save the environment, but are not willing to trade in their power and status for the sake of a few extra miles per gallon. Most of the current breed of hybrid vehicles are similar to design and style of existing smaller cars, which many people would not use due to their size before a hybrid power plant became an option. This may be indicative of the need for hybrid cars of the future to offer more comfort in larger vehicles for many more make the switch to hybrid energy.

Most car manufacturers were reluctant to jump on the bandwagon of hybrid vehicles, claiming the technology was too new and too costly to enable them to make a hybrid vehicle that the average person could afford. Ten years with the introduction of the Toyota Prius, hybrid cars of the future were pictured as being one or two passenger cars most often referred to as plain ugly. Designers than began incorporating hybrid power into existing plans and acceptance began to surge among those who were willing to trade into a smaller vehicle for promised reduce gas usage and to reduce emission gases. However, the hybrid cars of the future will have to do more than the current brands are doing to attract a wider range of consumers.

With General Motors the last of the major manufacturers to embrace the technology, there are luxury vehicles hitting the market that appeal to the luxury car buyer?s market. However, the hybrid cars of the future will have to be geared towards the buyers in the middle. With the smaller vehicles and some luxury cars going the way of the hybrid, a mid-size hybrid, in the middle of the price structure will do wonders to bolster hybrid use.

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Nick Niesen

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Nick Niesen
Joined: April 29th, 2015
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