Is It Time to Declare the Nissan Leaf a Flop? Read more: ht

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ruimegas
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Is It Time to Declare the Nissan Leaf a Flop? Read more: ht

Mensagem por ruimegas » 06 fev 2013, 21:18

Is It Time to Declare the Nissan Leaf a Flop?

Esta imprensa americana é completamente doida ...

[IMG]http://timebusinessblog.files.wordpress ... 240&crop=1[/IMG]

"The headline for a recent Detroit News story has it that the “20,000 sales target [is] unlikely” for the Nissan Leaf. But “unlikely” is probably understating things. It appears as if Nissan won’t get halfway to its 20,000-Leaf target for 2012, nor will it top last year’s mark of 9,679 units sold—which was itself a disappointment.

Thus far in 2012, Nissan has sold 4,228 all-electric Leafs, a decrease of 31.5% compared to the same period last year. Last month, 685 Leaf purchases were made in the U.S., a 50% decline compared to August 2011.

It’s understandable that electric-car sales aren’t exactly booming. This is a niche market, after all, and one that’s very new and unfamiliar to consumers. Even with government incentives, plug-ins are still very expensive compared to gas-powered cars, and all-electric vehicles like the Leaf can’t be used practically for road trips, or any journey of more than 75 miles or so.

(MORE: 10 Things That Cost Way More Outside the U.S. (Including the Nissan Leaf))

Still, one would expect that even if Leaf sales weren’t going gangbusters, they’d at least not be on the decline. That is, these are the expectations one would have if they believed the Leaf had a decent future ahead of it.

Even when gas prices spiked to nearly $4 per gallon in early 2012, electric car sales struggled. Just 478 Nissan Leafs sold in February, a month when gas prices were soaring around the country, especially so in California—a state where energy-conscious drivers are more inclined to be open to EVs such as the Leaf to begin with.

The other plug-in most often mentioned in the same breath as the Leaf—the Chevy Volt—hasn’t been a runaway hit either. But at least sales are growing. Through the first five months of 2012, Chevy sold 7,000 Volts, which was more than it sold in all of 2011. Sales have remained on the rise since then. In August of 2012, 2,831 Volt purchases were made, an 800% increase over the previous August. For the year thus far, Volt sales totaled nearly 13,500, up 325.5% over the same period in 2011. Granted, unless a miracle occurs, GM won’t hit its projected 2012 sales goal of 45,000 Volts, but at least sales are on the upswing.

(MORE: As More Hybrids Hit the Market, All-Electrics Still Trying to Catch On)

The same can’t be said of the Leaf, and the most obvious reason why is so-called “range anxiety.” That’s the worry drivers have when behind the wheel of a car that could run out of juice when a recharging station is nowhere nearby. Owners of the Volt, which runs on electric and gas power, experience no such anxiety—which is probably one of the reasons they chose a Volt over a Leaf in the first place.

The age of the Leaf, and mass-produced electric cars in general, is still quite young. It’s possible that the Leaf could one day catch on in a substantial way, or that another vehicle that runs purely on electric power could become as commonplace as the Toyota Corolla on roads in the future.

For the time being, though, the idea once passed around that the Leaf would be a “Prius Killer” now sounds laughable. Toyota’s new Plug-in Prius, which is only available in 15 states, is already outselling the Leaf. Toyota sold 1,047 plug-in electric Prius vehicles in August 2012, and a total of 6,082 for the year, compared to 685 and 4,228, respectively, for the Leaf. And the Prius family in general is a giant in the industry, with nearly 250,000 sales in the first quarter of 2012 alone.

What the numbers seem to be saying is that the Leaf is not only failing to replace the Prius as the fuel-efficient, eco-conscious car of choice, it is also increasingly looking like a flop."

Em: http://business.time.com/2012/09/07/is- ... af-a-flop/
NISSAN LEAF Branco c/Spoiler mk1 de 09JUN2011. 195.000 kms.
TESLA Model 3 AWD. Encomenda 03JUL2019. Entrega 09JUL2019. 72078 kms.
Associado da Associação de Utilizadores Veículos Eléctricos http://www.uve.pt

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Re: Is It Time to Declare the Nissan Leaf a Flop? Read more

Mensagem por mjr » 06 fev 2013, 21:42

Na América há os dois extremos. Fervorosos defensores da mobilidade elétrica e cabeças de pistão que não conseguem viver sem o (mau) cheiro e ruído de um CI.

É incrível como no país do V8 foi capaz de aparecer uma marca como a Tesla que está a ter um sucesso tremendo.
Nissan Leaf 40 Tekna preto, entregue em 30 de maio de 2018. 51400km em 2024-02-15
Nissan LEAF mk1 Preto, entregue em 7 de julho de 2011. 180000 km em 2023-12-22.
Tesla Model 3 LR preto entregue em 2019-03-06. 125000 km em 2023-12-22.
Sócio da associação de Utilizadores de Veículos Elétricos, UVE: http://www.uve.pt

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Re: Is It Time to Declare the Nissan Leaf a Flop? Read more

Mensagem por RJSC » 07 fev 2013, 15:51

mjr Escreveu:Na América há os dois extremos. Fervorosos defensores da mobilidade elétrica e cabeças de pistão que não conseguem viver sem o (mau) cheiro e ruído de um CI.

É incrível como no país do V8 foi capaz de aparecer uma marca como a Tesla que está a ter um sucesso tremendo.
Não será mais de Inglaterra (de onde é originário o termo "petrol head").
Já que os VE's nos estados unidos já apareceram mais que por cá na Europa:
- Na década de 90 (O EV1 foi criando antes das leis da Califórnia que obrigaram à existência de VE's);
- No início do século 20 em que haviam mais carros elétricos a circular na estradas que de combustão interna ou a vapor;
- Nas décadas de 60 e 70, várias empresas a tentar arrancar com os VE's e até marcas europeias achavam que lá é que os VE's iam vender: a Renault andou por lá nos anos 60 a vender um modelo de combustão convertido que nunca quis sequer tentar vender na Europa.

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