Filed under:
EV/Plug-in,
Manufacturing/Plants,
Legislation and Policy
Honda continues its low-volume rollout of the
Fit EV with a decision to
lease 200 units in Japan over the next two years, mostly to local governments and businesses. After unveiling the car in the U.S. last November, Honda announced it expects to bring about
1,100 units to market over the next three years. The number could be larger, though, since Honda will be monitoring market acceptance to gauge production volume. We suspect the modest sales target has something to do with
compliance with California's regulation that large automakers build at least
some zero-emission vehicles.
Honda's development team created the Fit EV with three targets: build an EV with greater range requiring less battery capacity, enhance motor drive performance and make the battery charging as time efficient as possible. The development team used two key words to define the EV's identity - "fun" and "mottainai" (which translates to "no waste.")
Honda chose the basic package of its internal combustion engine Fit with its compact body size and occupant comfort, and worked on building an electrified version that maximizes energy efficiency. Honda was able to achieve what Green Car Congress calls "the current best AC energy consumption rate of 106 Wh/km and one-charge mileage of 225 km (140 miles) in JC08 mode." As for limited production and sales targets, Honda
remains in line with other
plug-in-hesitant major automakers like
Ford,
Toyota and
Mitsubishi.
Honda's modest sales target adds 200 Fit EVs in Japan originally appeared on
AutoblogGreen on Tue, 04 Sep 2012 16:04:00 EST. Please see our
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