Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Mercedes-Benz Contemplates Offering CNG "B" Class Auto in the US



The Mercedes B Class




Here is some good news for a change. Mercedes-Benz is thinking about selling a "B" class compressed natural gas (CNG) vehicle for sale here in the United States. I consider it good news as it represents one more alternate energy vehicle that consumers can choose. I personally would like to see every dealer offer at least four models that can operate on something other than petroleum. The manufacturers could offer CNG, LPG (liquid petroleum gas), EV's, PHEV's, E85 and diesels that run on biofuels. Unfortunately, all we are offered today is one model of CNG (Honda Civic GX) and lots of E85 vehicles. Its not enough.

The Washington Auto Show is where the new vehicle will be announced this week. Mercedes-Benz is also on record stating that there are many alternative fuel vehicles and that all are needed. I couldn't have said it better myself.

From Automotive News:

"Mercedes-Benz says it is thinking of selling a vehicle fueled by natural gas in the United States.

Mercedes, part of Daimler AG, plans to display a B-class model that can run on compressed natural gas this week at the Washington Auto Show.

William Craven, general manager of regulatory affairs for Daimler's Washington office, confirmed the company's interest in testing the market for natural-gas-powered vehicles in the United States.

At a green-car conference before the Washington show, Craven and other industry leaders said many options to gasoline-powered vehicles exist, and all need to be used.

Most conference participants argued against government choosing a single solution to the problems of overreliance on petroleum and the automobile's role in the threat of climate change.

Johan de Nysschen, executive vice president of Audi of America Inc., warned that government pressure on the Detroit 3 to concentrate on plug-in electric hybrids could be the death knell for the struggling companies. He warned that the companies could end up trying to sell vehicles that don't make economic sense.

Natural gas once was considered a promising alternative fuel but has fallen out of favor in the light-duty segment.

Honda still sells the Civic GX, which uses compressed natural gas.

Richard Kolodziej, president of Natural Gas Vehicles for America, said the United States will miss a big opportunity if it fails to use its ample supplies of natural gas, which he said is climate-friendly, clean-burning and economical. Kolodziej's group promotes the use of natural gas and hydrogen in cars and trucks.

Craven told Automotive News that Mercedes-Benz sells a version of the B class in Europe that can run on gasoline or compressed natural gas.

He added: "We're testing the market" here."

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