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Tokyo Motor Show: Green Cars Roll Into Spotlight (VIDEO, PHOTOS)

YURI KAGEYAMA   11/29/11 11:39 PM ET   AP

TOKYO — Green cars rolled into the spotlight at the Tokyo auto show as Japan's automakers look to fuel efficient technology to reinvigorate growth after tough times.

The showcase for Japan's pillar auto industry was holding its preview for media on Wednesday ahead of opening to the public on Saturday.

Plug-in hybrids and electric cars are centerstage at the Tokyo Motor Show – reflecting both how green cars are growing in favor and the low profile of foreign automakers at the event.

The show been scaling back in recent years because of the waning importance of Japan as an auto market. Car makers – including Japan's – are increasingly looking to China, India and other nations with greater growth potential.

Ford Motor Co. of the U.S. skipped the show, and General Motors Co. had only a tiny corner booth. Just a handful of European makers such as BMW with a chance at wooing rich Japanese buyers had full-scale booths.

Japanese automakers have had a tough few years due to image problems from Toyota's massive recalls and the large production disruptions from the March disasters in northeastern Japan. But green technology remains a strong selling point for car markers such as Toyota Motor Corp. which pioneered broad consumer acceptance of gasoline-electric hybrid cars with its hit Prius.

Honda Motor Co. said it will start selling an electric version of its Fit subcompact in the U.S. and Japan by the middle of next year. It showed concept cars such as the AC-X plug-in hybrid, EV-STER electric roadster convertible and a tiny electric car called Micro Commuter

"We will continue to offer products with an edge," said Honda President Takanobu Ito before drinking orange juice poured by Honda's Asimo robot, which recently has gained more nimble human-like fingers.

Honda showed a portable battery that people could carry around and put not only in their electric cars and plug-ins but also small electric scooters.

Nissan Motor Co. had an updated version of its futuristic-looking electric car called Pivo 3, which can drive itself, find parking spaces and swerve around in almost a complete circle.

Koichiro Imoto, who writes about Japan's auto industry, says overseas interest in the show has plunged, except for a handful of manufacturers like Volkswagen AG that do good business in Japan.

"Technology is the only thing Japan has to cling to so the show is trying to highlight those strengths," he said. "Selling the technological superiority is the only way left for Japan."

Toyota President Akio Toyoda was outright emotional at his presentation when he said Japan was going through hard times after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in northeastern Japan.

Japanese automakers, including Toyota Motor Corp., were forced to scale back production as parts suppliers in northeastern Japan were damaged.

That battering was followed by a smaller but similar problem when suppliers got hit by flooding in Thailand, Toyoda said.

"Japan has been plunged into sadness," he said, often gesturing with his hands to dramatize his points.

Toyota must do all it can to work with the people of northeastern Japan and Thailand to propel a recovery, he said.

"Our messages are 'Fun to drive again,' and 'Never give up,' " he said, using English phrases for the mottos.

Mamoru Katou, auto analyst with Tokai Tokyo Research, believes the most interesting models on display are the ones close to being commercial models.

On display at Toyota's sprawling booth is the plug-in version of its hit Prius hybrid, which will start at 2.75 million yen ($35,200) with subsidies in Japan.

Toyota began taking orders in Japan for the plug-in on Tuesday. In the U.S., where Toyota has already started to take orders online, the car starts at $32,000 without subsidies, which will vary by state.

Toyota, which has sold more than 3.4 million hybrids worldwide so far, is targeting Prius plug-in sales of 60,000 a year globally. The car is set for delivery in Japan in January.

Toyota is also showing an electric car and a fuel cell prototype.

"Overall, interest is going to be diminished because the economy isn't doing so well around the world," Katou said. "But there's still interest in Toyota cars."

___

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at http://twitter.com/yurikageyama

Check out PHOTOS of the green cars on display:
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TOKYO — Green cars rolled into the spotlight at the Tokyo auto show as Japan's automakers look to fuel efficient technology to reinvigorate growth after tough times. The showcase for Japan's pi...
TOKYO — Green cars rolled into the spotlight at the Tokyo auto show as Japan's automakers look to fuel efficient technology to reinvigorate growth after tough times. The showcase for Japan's pi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cj Medina
09:14 PM on 12/27/2011
The Chevy Dolt:

Is by far and away the worst car ever built. This clunker makes the Yugo look like a Rolls Royce. The battery is always running low needing lengthy recharges, undependable, underpowered for its tasks, has no pep, has virtually no useful purpose and nobody wants it, but enough about Present Obama. The Volt is the perfect example of what is wrong with central planning; you get exactly what people don’t want. This car is what happens when you have a corrupt company is being run by incompetent bureaucrats motivated by political agendas rather than filling a market niche. Not to be outdone by the Cash for Clunkers program the union bosses came up with the perfect car for their taxpayer siphon sending Billions to this union payoff.
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11:23 AM on 12/20/2011
Instead of concept cars that likely won't get built, here's something that is getting built in the US and with lower carbon footprint right from the start: http://corporate.ford.com/news-center/press-releases-detail/pr-ford-introduces-focus-electric-35739
Greener manufacturing and 100 mpg equivalent.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
10:53 PM on 12/10/2011
We have the technology to make a car that goes for 4 hours on the highway, then recharges in 45 min while the driver takes a lunch break.
All the other cars will be obsolete as soon as it gets into production, and it will help reduce pollution issues..

The big question is, why is no one putting in the infrastructure and producing the car by mass production? (could it be big oil that insists on polluting to make money when they could easily make more money by going green?)
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
10:38 PM on 12/04/2011
Plug in hybrids with a 30-50 mile all electric range are what we need NOW. This will eliminate 90% of the oil we import but conserve the lithium needed for the batteries to a reasonable level. Hybrids have no range limits.
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12:58 PM on 12/02/2011
These cars are more of the same old bad technologies. WHere is the wireless power transmission? Battery is dead weight. Wheres the energy scavanging (fly wheel/waste heat)? wheres the built in solar etc. Wheres the autonomous driver software w HUD AR? hybrids? more combustion? thats so 19th century. rubber friction based propulsion generates huge amounts of particulate pollution. these cars are NOT green.
05:36 PM on 12/02/2011
Of course, all your complaints apply double to gasoline powered cars.

I can tell you the developments that ARE here already: 10-minute fast charge (Nissan Leaf); 300-mile driving range (Tesla Model S); 10+ year battery lifetime (Chevy Volt, Mitsubishi MiEV); series hybrid (Chevy Volt.)

No car can be 100% green, but EVs beat gasoline by miles. Did you know that processing gasoline uses nearly as much electricity as electric cars need to charge batteries?

If both types of car use equivalent amounts of electricity, isn't the one that doesn't also burn petroleum going to be far cleaner?
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07:05 PM on 12/02/2011
Modern gasoline powered combustion engines are 20% efficient. That means that 80% of the energy is wasted, just in the combustion process.

Future generations are going to look at the waste of fossil fuels and be flabbergasted. like those fools that are burning down the amazon to make charcoal.
07:20 AM on 12/02/2011
cover highways with solar panel roofs
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Liberal Independent
Clowns to the left of me Jokers to the right
10:12 PM on 11/30/2011
They're making these things look very kewl now! :)
05:29 PM on 11/30/2011
It's like a cooler version of Blade Runner.
03:51 PM on 11/30/2011
I suspect that there is some newer source of car mechanics that don't need anything to run off of. So of course gas will soon be banned and forbidden. So they have to make these electric cars to still get your money from sub-stations.
01:50 PM on 11/30/2011
Love the look of that BWI i, so sleek!
01:44 PM on 11/30/2011
The Price makes them out of reach for most folks so what good are they!
01:49 PM on 11/30/2011
hopefully, prices will eventually fall. but as of now, yes, they're right at the R&D stage of the product cycle so they'll be quite pricey for a good while.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wtf is this
we are part of society -- make it better for all!
01:15 AM on 12/10/2011
The initial cost of almost any technology is too much for the average person. Most people couldn't afford a laptop 20 years ago..... now they're everywhere. Electric vehicles will drop in price soon enough as the demand goes up & the technology becomes mainstream.
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11:41 AM on 12/20/2011
faved for insight
01:21 PM on 11/30/2011
Want to REALLY go green? Buy a diesel like the Volkswagen TDi.
05:39 PM on 12/02/2011
The VW TDi is on this fuel efficient automobile spreadsheet below, along the the Leaf, Volt, Prius, and Honda Civic. Unfortunately it doesn't do so well.

http://www.squidoo.com/a-free-calculator-for-economy-hybrid-and-electric-cars
09:19 PM on 12/02/2011
They base all their data on EPA numbers, which aren't the most accurate.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Treehuggindirtworshiper
Steward of God's Creation
01:17 PM on 11/30/2011
I can't wait! I would love to have an electric convertible!
12:45 PM on 11/30/2011
It is time to end the oil monopoly on transportation fuels. Those that believe PEAK OIL theory say rising demand from India and China will outpace the supply causing the price of oil to rise.
Bring on the electric, hybrid, flex-fuel, LNG, CNG and hydrogen fueled vehicles. The oil shortages of the 1970's showed us what is too come with rising prices, long gas lines and rationing of fuel. The oil and coal companies have us backed into a corner. We need to diversify our sources and types of energy. When those long gas lines come once again you will be glad you were able to "fuel " up at home with electric or CNG.
11:54 AM on 11/30/2011
I hope all the EV haters here can see why GM and Ford have to launch electric cars. Asia and Europe won't be holding back. All the overseas car brands have electric models in the pipeline. If Detroit doesn't make EVs, they'll be caught with their pants down again.

Not that I expect the mostly ignorant PR assault against EVs here in the US to stop. GM and Ford will likely sell many more of their EVs in Europe and Asia until Americans get a little bit brighter.

The Volt will go on sale in Europe in 2012 which should help the sales numbers significantly. GM plans to make 60,000 Volts next year.