Honda has been named America's "Greenest Automaker" for the fifth
consecutive time by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). The award
is earned by the company with the lowest combined score of its
smog-forming and greenhouse gas emissions (primarily CO2) in its U.S.
automobile fleet.
Honda has led the UCS rankings of
overall vehicle environmental performance since the first UCS study in
2000, marking a decade of Honda leadership in reduced vehicle emissions.
Honda earned the recognition this year with an industry-best score
based on model year 2008 data, the latest available for
analysis.
"As with the past four awards, we accept
this fifth honor as both recognition of our success and a challenge for
the future," said John Mendel, executive vice president of American
Honda Motor Co., Inc. "We continue to accelerate our efforts to improve
fuel economy and reduce emissions that contribute to global climate
change."
"Honda's decade-long claim to the Greenest
Automaker title has set a high bar for the industry," said Jim Kliesch, a
senior engineer with the Union of Concerned Scientists. "The companies
that do best in our analysis continually strive not only to sell the
greenest vehicles, but also to green their
best-sellers."
Honda's efforts to improve fuel
efficiency have resulted in a 1 mpg gain in the company's U.S. corporate
average fuel economy (CAFE) for model year 2009, up 3.3% over the
previous model year to 31.3 mpg, and 9.8% above the MY2009 industry
average of 28.8 mpg, as determined by the U.S. Department of
Transportation. Since MY2005, Honda's CAFE has increased 7.2%, outpacing
the company's voluntary goal, established in May 2006, to achieve a 5%
gain in CAFE over 2005 levels by 2010.
More recently,
Honda has taken a number of important steps in advancing the fuel
economy and emissions performance of its U.S. automobile fleet. This
includes the introduction of the Insight as the world's most affordable
hybrid car and the CR-Z as the world's first production sport hybrid
coupe. Further, the all-new 2011 Odyssey minivan and redesigned 2011
Accord made significant gains in fuel economy through the use of more
efficient low-friction engines and improved vehicle
aerodynamics.
Honda also continues its leadership in
the area of alternative-fuel vehicles. Retail sales of its natural
gas-powered Civic GX Sedan were recently expanded to dealers in Oklahoma
and Utah, in addition to California and New York. Honda's FCX Clarity
fuel cell electric vehicle, currently leased to a limited number of
customers in Southern California, is arguably the world's most advanced
zero-emissions automobile with zero tailpipe emissions and fuel
efficiency three times that of a comparable, gasoline-powered
automobile.
Additionally, in July 2010, the company
announced plans to introduce a battery-electric commuter-sized vehicle
and plug-in hybrid technology for mid-size and larger vehicles in the
U.S., both beginning in 2012. These market initiatives will be preceded
by U.S. demonstration programs beginning in 2010 and continuing in 2011
with Stanford University, Google Inc., and the City of Torrance,
California.
Honda is also developing its own
infrastructure solutions to the alternative-fuel vehicle equation. To
address the opportunity for zero-emissions commuting in a fuel cell
electric vehicle, in January of this year Honda began operating a
next-generation solar-powered hydrogen production and refueling station
on its Los Angeles R&D campus. The station uses power derived
from Honda-developed and -manufactured thin-film solar cells to provide
fuel for daily commuting in a carbon-free energy cycle.