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    Amid fears of gas prices hitting P100 per liter before yearend, each one of us must start to learn how to use our car properly

    By Al S. Mendoza
    Illustration by Jimbo Albano
     

    ON June 2 this year, General Motors said it would stop making pickup trucks and SUVs at four of its North American plants.

    Bewitched?  Bothered?  Bewildered?

    Think again, fellers.

    The motoring world wasn’t stunned one bit by the GM move.  The times called for it.  Seemingly unending oil price hikes in the world market demand drastic measures to keep one afloat.  And even the giants like GM need to swim or sink altogether.

    GM said the truck plant blowup, which amounts to about 35 percent in the company’s pickup (truck) production, would save the company $1 billion per year (about P42 billion). Projected side-by-side with earlier cost-cutting measures, it will save $15 billion by 2011 over its 2005 costs.

    That’s a lot of savings and, perhaps, that’s probably more than enough to finance the yearly supply of oil in America, whose consumption of 20.6 million barrels of oil a day makes it the largest oil consumer in the world.

    Hummer, too

    But listen.  GM, for decades the world’s industry leader before yielding that lofty position to Toyota just a while back, is also considering selling its Hummer brand, an emblem of the megavehicle on US highways.

    While some might even applaud GM’s move of extinguishing much of its certified gas-guzzlers in these trying times, it had come at a high, if not cruel, price: some 8,350 jobs would be cut at the four affected factories.

    In explaining the unprecedented decision, Rick Wagoner, GM chairman, said the company was now shifting toward “more efficient cars.”

    Said Wagoner:  “We at GM don’t think this is a spike or temporary shift.  We believe that it is, by and large, permanent.”

    What Wagoner meant by “more efficient cars” was, that GM would start concentrating on building cars in the $15,000 (P600,000) to $20,000 (P800,000) range. That’s less than half the price of GM’s high-profit SUVs and pickup trucks.

    Civic, Corolla do well

    A quick flashback:  Since the 1990s, the Americans had been accustomed to driving the Ford F-series and similar pickup trucks.  But last May, sales of the Honda Civic and Accord, as well as the Toyota Corolla and Camry, broke the market stranglehold of the F-series and its truck brothers.   It marked the first time since December 1992 that a car—not a pickup—was America’s top-selling vehicle.

    The reason is obvious:  Go small and you go big in slashing that gas consumption of yours.  Not only in America but also in the Philippines as well.

    Suddenly, the power of the smaller car’s latent capacity for fuel efficiency is being recognized worldwide with uncompromising vitality.  And that’s a natural result of soaring world prices of oil: Hard times spawn practical solutions.

    Buying habits

    Actually, the unabated surge of oil prices has not only forced our car manufacturers to refocus their approaches to car production, it also radically affected the buying, if not the driving, habits of Americans—and, yes, Filipinos, too, for that matter.

    Notice that more and more people—not just the Americans, really—are feeling the car crunch worldwide in relation to a car owner’s gasoline budget. 

    With fuel prices rising faster than Al Gore’s global warming alert, people might one day wake up to find a liter of gasoline in this country selling at P100 (P52+ at the moment).  In America, it’s now nearly $4 (P160) a gallon (a gallon consists of nearly three liters).  It’s now $7 to a gallon in Belgium and in most parts of Europe.

    During April, May and June, sales of bigger vehicles in America have gone down drastically in favor of the smaller cars.

    Pickup trucks became the fad in America in the 1990s, when gas didn’t cost much more than $1 a gallon.

    When it became $3.98 a gallon 18 years later, all the good vibes of the F-250 and a fully loaded F-150 and the like had turned utterly ugly.

    Cushioning the blow

    Jake Fisher of US Consumer Reports, in a talk with The New York Times’ David Leonhardt, said:

    “While the F-250 costs $100,000 and a fully loaded F-150 costs about $70,000, a Ford Focus still costs less than $40,000 over five years.  A Honda Civic Hybrid does, too.  A Toyota Prius costs only a little more.  A Subaru Outback station wagon runs $50,000 or so.

    “To put this in perspective, the difference between a Focus and an F-250 over five years is $60,000 [P2.4 million approximately at P40 to a dollar].  The annual pretax income of a typical family in this country [US] is also about $60,000. So choosing an F-250 over a Focus is like volunteering for a 20-percent pay cut.  The relative resale value might cushion the blow a little, but not much.”

    ‘Small ones’

    Now one more minor flashback: The V8 vehicles from America and Europe used to dominate Philippine roads from the 1950s to the 1960s, when the Corollas and the Civics, and the Lancers and the Sentras were as alien to us as Spielberg’s ET.

    But when the “small ones” from Japan started making their inroads to the country in the 1970s, life had never been the same again for the Filipino car buff. It meant smaller cars meant smaller gas budget from then on. It meant a life of ease.

    With the odious oil ouch, America has rediscovered—or was forced to rediscover?—the zing of the “small one.”

    “The new economics of car buying is, ‘Don’t overbuy,’” Fisher said.  “Buy something you’re going to need most of the time.”

    Even as the average Filipinos have been used to driving the “small one” practically in the last 30 years or so, that’d still be perfect advice from Fisher as we’ve been reminded once more of the tremendous economic benefits derived from driving a car with a small engine.

    In this country, whose middle-income segment is nearly half the country’s population of 85 million, Japan has always had a field day flooding the market with their “small ones.”  Most recently, in fact, manufacturers of small cars from Korea (Hyundai) and China (Chery)—and, for a little while, Malaysia was also into it with its Proton—have joined the bandwagon.

    Suicidal

    Simple logic says that if you buy a vehicle with a bigger engine, you spend more gas when you use it.  Thus, driving a big vehicle has become suicidal these days amid fears of more price increases of oil in the months to come.

    More gas in your car means more cut in your salary.  The missus and the kids would surely whine seeing a big chunk of the family budget pie going to Saudi Arabia, Russia and the US, which, surprisingly, are now the world’s chief producers of oil.

    Thus, the car that Fisher said we need most of the time is definitely and absolutely the “small one.”  The Japanese carmakers had been mostly providing us that—with killing efficiency—the last 30 years or so.

    Cure-all?

    But is it the cure-all?  Will the “small one” thoroughly fix the motorist’s budget so as to keep the family happy and humming smoothly the whole year through?

    Not exactly, really.

    At the very least, the “small one” would simply cushion the impact every now and then of ever-perilous dents to the take-home pay of the eight-to-five employee.

    Take America.  Over there, an average motorist would need at least $30,000 (P1.2 million) a year in gas budget at $4 (P160) to a gallon as of May 2008, compared with only $10,000 (P40,000)  in the 1990s.

    A whole lot of spendin’ goin’ on over there, huh?

    Hybrid car

    Is there a relief in sight?

    Yes, there is, but it’s not forthcoming.  It will take more time before man becomes finally freed from the greed-clutches of nations that control oil, to include Iran, Brunei and Qatar.

    It might probably take more years before your car’s dependence on gas would virtually come to a halt—but happily, though, the signs are already there.  Man’s race in pursuit of untying oil’s lynch on your car has seen the dawn in the wondrous form of the hybrid car that was invented by Japan’s Toyota a dozen years or so ago. 

    For, indeed, the determined bid to discover the nonfossil fuel to run our vehicles should be man’s ultimate goal amid a perennially ugly backdrop of oil being under the sole control of a greedy few.

    The seeds of discovery—and recovery—seem to be now in place.

    Days numbered

    With the hybrid car now part of the global agenda in the automaker’s mind, the days of us being haplessly held hostage by gas-powered vehicles could be virtually numbered.

    So, will that car be gas-free 20, 30 years from now?

    Are we still going to talk about that tiger in your tank years or decades from now?

    Who knows that by 2030 maybe, a liquid-free car would roam the street and not even tap water is needed to run it?

    Tank-less, thankless

    Will a tank-less car tomorrow then be in order?

    If so, never thankless would be the job of the one who comes up with it.

    By then, when the race for relief is over, everybody could happily let out a big collective sigh of relief.

    But until that time of salvation is here, until that day is come, let’s do our own bit of helping everybody get past that hump of a pump: Cut trips to the mall, ride the public transport, plan trips, reduce eating-out sprees.

    In short, start making it a habit to save on gas by spending your time mostly at home and, in the process, ease the pain at the gas pump.  Better yet, be a homebody from hereon—and be a buddy once more to your family and neighbors as well.

    That is a task not as daunting and as thankless as guzzling up gas on that car sitting prettily at the garage—no matter how small that thing may seem.

    That “small one” will still be terribly impossible, even messy, when handled improperly.

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