Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Wall Street Journal Misses Its Mark With The Dart

It's the kind of mistake that only a blogger (said with a contemptuous sneer) would make. The Wall Street Journal reports that

"U.S. regulators rated a new Chrysler Group LLC compact car with highway fuel-economy of 41 miles a gallon, a move that fulfills a key element of the company's 2009 federal bailout and cleared the way earlier this year for majority owner Fiat SpA to increase its stake in the Detroit auto maker."

They got it wrong.

To hear the WSJ tell it, you'd be led to believe that

"Italy's Fiat took control of Chrysler in 2009 after agreeing with the U.S. government to help the U.S. auto maker produce a line of new fuel-efficient on cars based on Fiat designs. Fiat was originally given a 20% stake in Chrysler, and was allowed to increase its holding for achieving certain goals, one of which was helping Chrysler produce a car that goes at least 40 miles on a gallon of gasoline."

The WSJ isn't technically wrong – one of the stipulations was for Fiat to help Chrysler produce a 40 mpg car. But it had nothing to do with 40 mpg highway, the Dodge Dart Aero, or even the current fuel economy regulations as we know them.

As our Editor Emeritus Ed Niedermeyer reported back in 2011, the requirement, as stipulated by the U.S. government, was for Fiat to produce a made-in-America car that got a combined 40 mpg unadjusted. This means, crucially, that the combined figure is calculated using the pre-2008 fuel economy calculation standard that led to inflated fuel economy ratings. How much of a difference does this really make? Ed laid it all out unsparingly

"40 MPG combined unadjusted translates to almost exactly 30 MPG combined on the "adjusted" EPA test cycle which is used to produce window stickers for vehicles currently on the market. This is hardly a benchmark for a meaningful "Ecological Commitment" in the sense that a significant number of currently-available mass-market cars currently achieve this standard, and the cleanest vehicles on the market exceed it by dramatic amounts. According to the EPA, at least 11 2010 model-year "compact cars" currently achieve the 30 MPG combined adjusted standard. At least six "midsize sedans" achieved the magic number for the outgoing model-year, as did two "upscale sedans," two convertibles, two station wagons and three SUVs (although the SUVs are all derivatives of the Ford Escape Hybrid)."

The WSJ uses the 2013 Dodge Dart Aero as its example, but the Dart Aero isn't the sole model to get the 40 MPG unadjusted combined figure – the base 1.4L 6-speed manual car returns 32 mpg combined, while the automatic 1.4L returns 31 mpg combined, which would place them above the 40 mpg unadjusted cutoff value. The Aero models get 32 mpg combined with either transmission. Meanwhile, Darts with the 2.0L 4-cylinder get 29 mpg combined with the manual (just missing the mark) and 27 mpg with the automatic.

While Ed already explored the inside story of how a few word choices effectively torpedoed any chance for meaningful advancement in fuel efficiency, while giving Marchionne & Co a free slice of Fiat, the "40 MPG meme" is still alive and well. For all the Darts that the WSJ has thrown at the Obama administration, one would think that they'd be the last party to let the Dems dodge their well-aimed crosshairs on this issue.

 



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




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