According to a report released yesterday by Pike Research,
sales of medium to heavy-duty hybrid trucks are poised to reach volumes
of more than 100,000 per year by 2017. The study predicts a 47 percent
year-over-year increase for the heavy alternative powertrain sector,
which currently accounts up less than 1 percent of total medium and
heavy-duty sales.
“The truck market has experienced seismic changes in the last few
years,” said Pike senior analyst Dave Hurst. “As fuel prices have
increased, truck manufacturers have responded by expanding their
offerings of alternative drivetrains to help reduce emissions and fuel
usage by trucks.”Still, the report says hybrid and plug-in electric trucks aren't yet viable for fleet operators from a lifetime cost perspective, and will have to rely on government subsidies until production costs fall further. Pike predicts that those incentives will be strongest in Asia, where it says the market will grow to 41,657 alternative drivetrain trucks sold in 2017, dwarfing its North American projection of less than 26,000 sales for that year.
The study comes less than a month after the Obama admuse an average of 547 gallons of fuel per year, the average heavy-duty truck burns through nearly 13,000 gallons over the same period. In all, medium and heavy-duty trucks account for 21 percent of total annual transportation-derived greenhouse gas emissions in the United States.
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