NC Alt Fuels

a forum for alternative fuels and advanced vehicle technologies in North Carolina

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

North Carolina State Releases First Greenhouse Gas Inventory

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Campus Technology, August 4, 2009
Dian Schaffhauser

North Carolina State University has released its first greenhouse gas (GHG) inventory -- about 14 months after initially signing onto the American College & University Presidents Climate Commitment. Compiling the GHG inventory is the first step in developing a Climate Action Plan (CAP), as laid out by the Climate Commitment. Signatories are given about nine months after their start date to submit their first greenhouse gas report, a deadline missed by the university, which committed on May 15, 2008.
The inventory, which measures emissions for 2008 on multiple campuses and satellite offices, serves as a benchmark against which future emission reduction efforts will be measured. The major sources of emissions include electricity (53 percent), natural gas (22.5 percent), community (12 percent), and refrigerants (6 percent).
Among peer institutions, the inventory found that North Carolina State's emissions were comparable with some of the environmentally conscious East Coast schools and are in line with current trends.
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Monday, August 03, 2009

Congress scrambles to fund "cash for clunkers" program

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Citizen Times, August 1, 2009
Jon Ostendorff

Car dealers in Western North Carolina waited Friday for word on whether the government would pour an additional $2 billion into the popular "cash for clunkers" car purchase program.
Called the Car Allowance Rebate System, or CARS, the program offers owners of old cars and trucks $3,500 or $4,500 toward a new, more fuel-efficient vehicle, in exchange for scrapping their old vehicle.
The program was rescheduled to last through Nov. 1 or until the money ran out, but few predicted the fund would run out so quickly. The original $1 billion in funding was expected to generate up to 250,000 new car sales.
The U.S. House passed a bill Friday that shifted $2 billion from an energy loan program that was part of the economic stimulus plan passed earlier this year. The bill was approved on a vote of 316-109.
Getting Senate approval could be a bigger challenge.
Manger dealers didn't start selling under the program until Monday because of a lag in getting the rules from the federal government.
Within a week, the money was gone.
"We had a good time with it," said Tommy Waigand, manager of Hunter Nissan Lincoln Mercury in Hendersonville. "It has gotten a lot of people in off the street that wouldn't have come in to buy a car."
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Monday, July 27, 2009

Car dealers hope Cash for Clunkers drives up sales

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News 14 Carolina, July 24th 2009
By Miracle King

The government's new Cash for Clunkers incentive program has buyers driving off car lots in droves. The program - formally called the Car Allowance Rebate System - encourages car buyers to trade in older, gas-guzzling vehicles for brand new fuel-efficient ones.
The program started Friday and is not only meant to help the environment, but also car dealers, buyers and North Carolina's economy.
"We have about 600 dealerships in North Caorlina, every one of which is ready to sell a new car and get that old clunker off the road," Bob Glaser, president of the North Carolina Auto Dealers Association, said.
The program helps shoppers buy or lease a more environmentally-friendly vehicle when they trade in a less fuel-efficient car or truck. But not all trade-ins will qualify.
"If it's [an improvement of] at least four miles to the gallon, they get $3,500. If they pick a car ou that gets [an improvement of] 10 milers to the gallon or more, they get $4,500," Todd Holmes, general manager at Leith Honda in Raleigh, said.
And there are more stipulations. The car has to be drivable with at least a years worth of insurance history. It can't be more than 25 years old. You have to purchase a new car when you trade, and the retail price of your new car can't exceed $45,000.
Though the ride may be a little bumpy for buyers, dealerships have finally gotten their safety belt to help them from flying off this crashing economy.
"Our average sales in North Carolina were about 33,000 to 35,000 a month, and with the economic downturn in the fourth quarter of 2008, our vehicle sales have dropped at about 20,000 units per month," Bob Glaser, with the North Carolina Auto Dealers Association, said. "That's about a 40 percent decrease in the state of North Carolina, so we are very pleased to have the Cash for Clunkers program in effect."

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Friday, July 24, 2009

U.S. Auto Sales May Reach 10 Million Pace This Month

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Bloomberg, July 24, 2009
Alex Ortolani

U.S. sales of cars and light trucks may reach a 10 million annual pace in July for the first time this year, helped by a $1 billion government program to get less fuel-efficient vehicles off the road.
The so-called "cash-for-clunkers" program "is being viewed by automakers as having the potential to drive a meaningful uptick in sales over the final week of he month," Rod Lache, a New York-based analyst at Deutsche Bank, wrote in a report yesterday. He estimated a 10.2 million sales rate.
The pace has been no higher than 9.9 million in any other month this year, as the recession damped consumer confidence and credit tightened. The federal program, implemented today under a law that took effect July 1, provides a credit of as much as $4,500 for buyers who trade in older vehicles to be scrapped for new models with higher fuel economy.
Edmunds.com, an auto-information provider, and market-research firm J.D. Power & Associates also estimated that the July pace will top 10 million, which would be a sign that sales are coming off a bottom. Automakers sold 13.2 million vehicles last year, and averaged 16.8 million from 2000 through 2007.
General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co., Toyota Motor Corp. and other automakers will report July sales on August 3. The June seasonally adjusted rate was 9.7 million.
The July pace may be almost 10.5 million, Edmunds.com estimated in a statement yesterday. The Santa Monica, California-based firm cited "glimmers of hope in the economy" and the cash-for-clunkers effort.
"The program will boost automotive sales and remove some of these vehicles that need to come off the road," said Rachel Richards, vice president of retail strategy for dealership owner Sonic Automotive, Inc. in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Sonic, the third-largest U.S. auto retailer, will soon introduce a Web site to explain the federal program to consumers and will work with the company's dealerships on how to administer it, Richards said in an interview today.
"There are a lot of steps that automotive retailers need to handle to make sure they get their money from the government," she said.
J.D. Power estimated a 10 million rate and credited an increase in sales to fleet customers such as rental-car companies and government agencies. The firm, based in Westlake Village, California, based its projection on sales data through July 15 from more htan 10,000 dealerships.
The federal program has "potential for increased sales in the short term" as some automakers boost incentives to match the government credit, J.D. Power said today in a statement. Chrysler Group LLC announced such offers on July 22.
"Many consumers don't understand the specifics of the program," and sales to individuals this year may be "only incrementally affected," said Gary Dilts, J.D. Power's senior vice president of global automotive operations.
J.D. Power and Edmunds.com both had predicted that the rate for June would exceed 10 million.

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