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A recent study Carnegie Mellon University argued that “plug-in” hybrid-electric vehicles, like the Chevy Volt, are too expensive. Are they right?

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A recent study Carnegie Mellon University argued that “plug-in” hybrid-electric vehicles, like the Chevy Volt, are too expensive. Are they right?

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No. They assumed that the battery would cost $16,000 (or 1,000/KWH). As GM says, that’s way too high. (Oddly, they also conclude that a plug-in with a 10 mile range would be better, because drivers would stop and charge every 10 miles!) Similarly, $10,000 for the Volt’s battery has been widely reported in the media, but we shouldn’t rely on mass media! Really, no one knows how much the batteries cost. The $10K figure is purely speculation. Here’s an example, in the CS Monitor. We see that it doesn’t say $10K. Here’s what the article says: “the race isn’t over making a Chevy Volt battery designed to run 40 miles on a single charge that could (emphasis added) cost as much as $10,000.” We can see that the reporter doesn’t have a firm source for this cost figure. Elsewhere, the article says: “Still others say that the cost of new battery power for PHEVs may drop faster and already be lower than what has been widely reported at perhaps $500 per kilowatt-hour or even less, says Suba Arunkuma

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