NOT DEAD YET | New Nissan infinity engine bids to extend life for internal combustion
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BEIJING
— Nissan Motor Co, an early mover in the electric vehicle market, will
use the Los Angeles auto show next week to send a message about
gasoline-fueled engines: They’re not dead yet.
Shinichi Kiga, head of Nissan’s gasoline engine project group, told
Reuters the Japanese automaker is resolved to keep improving internal
combustion technology to prolong its usefulness for decades to come. A
new Infiniti QX50 sport utility vehicle to be unveiled at a media event
in Los Angeles on Nov. 28 will highlight one technology Kiga plans to
use.
The QX50 will be the industry’s first use of a variable compression
ratio system. The engine has a maximum thermal efficiency of around 40
percent, as much as twice the level of current gasoline engines in the
industry, which average around 20 to 30 percent. Thermal efficiency
refers to the power an engine generates from a unit of fuel.
The Nissan/Infiniti VC Turbo illustrates a challenge for policy
makers eager to see the end of the internal combustion engine’s
dominance of transportation. While battery costs for electric vehicles
are coming down, improvements in internal combustion engine efficiency
could push the moment when electric vehicles achieve cost parity without
government subsidies further into the future.
Advancing the internal combustion engine technology is “one of the
most overlooked trends in the industry,” James Chao, Asia-Pacific chief
of consultancy IHS Markit Automotive, said. “These advances beg the
question. Are EVs the best solution to the issue of vehicle greenhouse
emissions?”
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