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High fuel prices force Californians into hybrids, or off the road

Chinya Onyewemjo puts 30 USD worth of fuel into her Hummer in February 2008 in Miami Beach Florida. Faced with surging gasoline prices a growing number of car-crazy Californians are ditching gas-guzzlers for hybrids and avoiding the road in a state k ...
Chinya Onyewemjo puts 30 USD worth of fuel into her Hummer in February 2008 in Miami Beach, Florida. Faced with surging gasoline prices, a growing number of car-crazy Californians are ditching gas-guzzlers for hybrids and avoiding the road in a state known for its traffic jams and scenic routes.

Faced with surging gasoline prices, a growing number of car-crazy Californians are ditching gas-guzzlers for hybrids and avoiding the road in a state known for its traffic jams and scenic routes.
Like many Americans, Jorge Montijo and his wife once had two cars in their Los Angeles garage.

But with gas prices between 3.8 dollars and 4.3 dollars a gallon -- four times the cost a few years ago -- the environmentally-conscious couple recently sold their two vehicles and replaced them with one hybrid car in February.

In addition to fuel costs, the pair had to worry about paying for parking and car insurance.

"Frankly, gas prices are ridiculous. I remember paying a buck for gas not so long ago. It's four times that right now. I don't even know how people with large cars are coping," Montijo, a television and film sound editor, told AFP.

Montijo now uses the metro to go to work while his wife drives to her job as a school teacher. They also use the car in the evenings and weekends, but they have reduce the amount of times they go out to parks, restaurants or concerts.

"We are saving at least a couple hundred dollars a month," he said. "Since we've reduced the impact of gas prices in our regular everyday lives, we aren't holding back from buying other things we'd normally buy."

Melvin Cortez, 34, spends 378 dollars a month in gasoline driving 131 kilometers (82 miles) from his home in Long Beach to his teaching job at a school in La Puente, a Los Angeles suburb.

"My life has been altered further since gas prices are increasing. I now have to work longer hours to make extra money," he said.

"In addition, I also spend a little less on myself when I shop and I go out a little bit less too," he said, voicing a concern of many Americans also worried about the rising costs of food and basic services.

"Now, I rather go to the gym during that time so I can burn calories instead of spending money at (bar) happy hours or burning gas during traffic time."

Car salesmen report a drop in sales of vans and other eight-cylinder vehicles have dropped.

"Until two years ago we were selling between 300 and 350 vehicles a month, now it's 200 to 250 a month," said Roger Cowan, general sales manager of the Community Chevrolet Dealer in Burbank.

Sales of smaller, four- and six-cylinder cars have risen while sales of sport-utility vehicles and trucks have dropped by 25 to 35 percent, Cowan said.

"I wouldn't say people are selling us their SUVs, but they're not buying as many SUVs and trucks as they were, say, two years ago, or even a year ago," he said.

Interest in hybrids is likely linked to economic reasons rather than concern about the environment, Cowan said.

"The celebrities do it because it keeps their names in the news," he said, "but the average Joe in the street will buy one because it saves them money on gas."

© 2008 AFP

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Posted by Glis 04/28/08 18:57
Rank: 2.4/5 after 5 votes
Hybrids are a joke. You can get a turbo-diesel or well made regular unleaded that gets comparable gas mileage without the GIGANTIC production footprint of a hybrid. Plus, people complain about gas prices at the same time they commute in trucks and SUVs, because they 'need the room'. Some rich investor needs to start developing affordable condos near major work centers, people would gladly live in a slum if they can keep their cars, drive around a trailer park if you doubt it...
Posted by quantum_flux 04/28/08 21:10
Not rated yet.
Way to go California! Setting another trend for the rest of the world to follow :)

QF's Blog: http://irrational...pot.com/
Posted by superhuman 04/29/08 03:29
Rank: 5/5 after 2 votes
>prices between 3.8 dollars and 4.3 dollars a gallon

Its still dirt cheap
Posted by CreepyD 04/29/08 07:38
Rank: 5/5 after 1 vote
You're totally right, that's equivalent to £0.42 - £0.47 per litre in the UK.
We are already paying about £1.10 per litre in the UK.. That's $10 per gallon.
Posted by googleplex 04/29/08 11:37
Rank: 3/5 after 1 vote
The US pays its Oil Companies subsidies. I recall the UK total gasoline tax burden is around 200%, so that partly explains the difference. Then there is a record weak dollar.
One reason we drive big cars in California is for safety. If a big SUV hits a small car then it's crush like a soda can. You just don't feel safe in a tiny car. As one detroit designer said, "if we could put a gun turret on a vehicle it would sell".
Diesels stink, are noisy and pollute terribly. The soot emissions from diesels has been proven to be the seed particle causing blood clots that give rise to strokes etc. Plus diesel is more expensive per gallon which is off putting. Most people don't realize that it goes further than a gallon of gasoline. Diesel is not widely available at gas stations.
Posted by Masked Marauder 04/29/08 16:17
Rank: 5/5 after 2 votes
which is why we are buying an Aptera (www.aptera.com) right around 300 mpg, and like riding my motorcycle, you just have to be careful.
Posted by Glis 04/29/08 19:20
Rank: 5/5 after 1 vote
I don't agree with the 'big car=safe' argument or that diesel is dirty. Having a higher center of gravity and a lot more mass is verrry bad for handling and rolling, plus, most newer compacts meet the same impact/safety specs as larger vehicles. Most consumer diesels produced in the last 10 years are CLEAN and (at least in PHX) 90% of the gas stations have diesel, not to mention how easily you can convert to bio/NG/etc.