94-23455. Minimum Driving Range for Dual Fueled Electric Passenger Automobiles  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 183 (Thursday, September 22, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-23455]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: September 22, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
    
    49 CFR Part 538
    
    [Docket No. 94-35; Notice 1]
    RIN 2127-AF37
    
     
    
    Minimum Driving Range for Dual Fueled Electric Passenger 
    Automobiles
    
    AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), 
    Department of Transportation (DOT).
    
    ACTION: Request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: This document announces that NHTSA is considering the proposal 
    of a minimum driving range for dual fueled electric passenger 
    automobiles, otherwise known as hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs). The 
    purpose of establishing the range is to encourage the production of 
    HEVs. An HEV which meets the range would qualify to have its fuel 
    economy calculated according to a special procedure that would 
    facilitate the efforts of its manufacturer to comply with the corporate 
    average fuel economy standards. Comments are requested to assist the 
    agency in developing the proposed range.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received by November 21, 1994.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments on this notice must refer to the docket and notice 
    numbers set forth above and then be submitted (preferably 10 copies) to 
    the Docket Section, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 
    Room 5313, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. (Docket hours 
    are 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.)
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Ms. Yolene Young, Office of Market Incentives, NRM-21, Room 5320, 
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 400 Seventh Street SW., 
    Washington, DC 20590. Telephone: (202) 366-6349.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Alternative Motor Fuels Act of 1988 
    (AMFA), as amended by the Energy Policy Act of 1992, has two essential 
    purposes:
        (1) To encourage the development and widespread use of methanol, 
    ethanol, natural gas, other gaseous fuels, and electricity as 
    transportation fuels by consumers; and
        (2) To promote the production of alternatively fueled motor 
    vehicles.
        To achieve those purposes, the AMFA provides that alternatively 
    fueled motor vehicles that meet an appropriate minimum driving range 
    qualify for special treatment in the calculation of their fuel economy 
    for purpose of their manufacturers' compliance with the corporate 
    average fuel economy (CAFE) standards.
        The inclusion of electricity in the list of alternative fuels 
    covered by the AMFA necessitates that a minimum driving range be 
    established for dual fueled electric passenger automobiles for fuel 
    economy credit purposes. The AMFA specifies a minimum driving range of 
    200 miles for dual fueled passenger cars (other than dual fueled 
    electric) when operating on the alternative fuel, but allows the 
    Secretary of Transportation to establish the minimum driving range for 
    dual fueled electric passenger cars.
        The purpose of this notice is to seek public comments about HEVs 
    that would aid the agency in developing a proposed driving range. The 
    AMFA and Energy Policy Act provisions, which are codified at 49 U.S.C. 
    sections 32901(c) and 32905, require the Secretary of Transportation to 
    establish a minimum driving range for dual fueled electric vehicles. 
    This minimum range requirement applies to passenger automobiles only. 
    It does not apply to dual fueled light trucks.
        In seeking to carry out its goals, the Act attempts to balance two 
    competing objectives:
        (1) Encouraging the production of alternatively fueled vehicles by 
    offering CAFE standard compliance incentives; and
        (2) Encouraging the purchase of alternatively fueled vehicles by 
    consumers by providing the incentives to only those vehicles whose 
    range of operation is large enough to meet consumer needs.
        The setting of a minimum driving range for dual fueled electric 
    automobiles must balance the needs of the consumer with the technical 
    and economic considerations that are faced by the manufacturers. A low 
    minimum driving range eligibility criterion might encourage the 
    production of dual fueled cars, but lead to dual fueled electric 
    vehicles being designed with such a low alternative fuel driving range 
    that consumers do not buy them or, even if they buy them, infrequently 
    operate them on the alternative fuel. Conversely, an excessively 
    stringent minimum driving range eligibility criterion might discourage 
    the production of dual fueled electric cars and unnecessarily 
    compromise other vehicle attributes and aspects of performance. 
    Manufacturers would be discouraged by an overly-stringent minimum range 
    because a vehicle which does not meet the minimum driving range for its 
    type is unlikely to be built since the manufacturer would not receive 
    any of the benefits or incentives provided by the Act.
        From the viewpoint of the consumer, the necessary driving range may 
    be dictated by the convenience of a range that permits a typical 
    workweek travel distance, or a daily travel distance for a fleet car. 
    Also, if the majority of consumers would use a dual fueled electric 
    vehicle in an urban area with more recharging stations or in a fleet 
    application with a central recharging station, a large driving range 
    may be less critical.
        Whether the range is large or small, the agency will need a method 
    of measuring the range of HEVs. NHTSA is considering basing the dual 
    fueled electric vehicle driving range on procedures established by a 
    Society of Automobile Engineers (SAE) committee. The SAE is currently 
    developing procedures for chassis dynamometer measurements of range, 
    electrical energy consumption, fuel economy, and exhaust emissions of 
    HEVs. In a brief overview, the SAE HEV Test Procedure Task Force 
    committee's actions will include:
        (1) Classifying the vehicle by driving range and ability to 
    complete the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) driving cycle,
        (2) Testing the vehicle on the appropriate type of cycle,
        (3) Testing at other driver activated control settings, if 
    appropriate, and
        (4) Estimating annual fuel economy, emissions, and electric energy 
    consumption.
        The overview stated above is from SAE's first rough draft of the 
    procedure for HEV testing, and it does not specify when the final 
    procedure will be published.
        To aid the agency in relating the data on driving range for dual 
    fueled electric vehicles to the unique characteristics of dual fueled 
    passenger automobiles, NHTSA is posing a number of questions in the 
    following areas on the use of dual fueled electric passenger 
    automobiles, as well as any other relevant areas such as:
        (a) Consumer acceptability,
        (b) Economic practicability,
        (c) Technology,
        (d) Environmental impact,
        (e) Safety,
        (f) Driveability, and
        (g) Performance.
    Information on other factors is also welcome. The data provided in 
    response to these questions will be considered by NHTSA in developing a 
    proposed minimum driving range for dual fueled electric passenger 
    automobiles. The data will also aid the agency in making preliminary 
    judgments about such fundamental matters as the extent to which 
    manufacturers would seek to achieve the selected range in designing 
    dual fueled electric passenger automobiles, the production volumes or 
    schedules for those vehicles, the cost and other implications of 
    different ranges, and the likely consumer acceptability of different 
    driving ranges. For easy reference, the questions are numbered 
    consecutively throughout the document.
        In providing a comment on a particular matter or in responding to a 
    particular question, interested persons are requested to provide any 
    relevant factual information to support their conclusions or opinions, 
    including but not limited to test data, statistical and cost data, and 
    the source of such information. The agency is particularly interested 
    in quantitative evaluations of anticipated environmental impacts and 
    energy conservation impacts.
        NHTSA requests information and comments on the following questions:
        1. How should minimum driving ranges for dual fuel electric 
    passenger automobiles be determined? Is there any trend toward 
    increased or decreased driving ranges?
        2. Can the vehicle operate solely on electricity or must the 
    auxiliary power source be activated in order to follow the EPA driving 
    cycle? How would you compute driving range on electricity if the 
    auxiliary power source is activated during the driving cycle? What if 
    the other power source is also alternative fueled?
        3. Can the SAE procedure be adapted for use with the EPA urban and 
    highway cycles for determining driving range? Why or why not? Is there 
    some other test procedure that will be suitable for dual fueled 
    electric vehicle?
        4. Would dual fueled electric vehicles be generally utilized by 
    consumers residing in urban areas and by fleets where it would be 
    practical to provide for recharging at centralized facilities as 
    opposed to consumers in rural areas? Also, where would it be practical 
    to recharge the battery?
        5. What driving range does the consumer expect from the passenger 
    cars that he/she operates on electricity? Does the range vary with the 
    size or typical use of the car; e.g., a subcompact car as compared to a 
    large station wagon, or a car typically used for city commuting 
    compared to one used primarily for urban and intercity driving? Does 
    the expected driving range vary with the economic or social profile of 
    the car operator; e.g., are younger drivers satisfied with smaller 
    ranges or do high-income drivers demand greater driving ranges? Would 
    the consumer be willing to accept a lower driving range in a vehicle 
    with the added flexibility of dual fuel capability or with more 
    recharging points and shorter waiting times? What is the minimum 
    driving range acceptable to consumers?
        6. Do vehicle manufacturers consider availability of fuel 
    distribution or recharging points in establishing driving ranges?
        7. Describe any trade-off for the design of the vehicle with cost 
    that would dictate an upper limit of driving range for economic 
    practicability.
        8. Discuss reduction in vehicle driving range due to climate 
    control energy demand. Discuss any new technology utilized in vehicle 
    design and in advanced heating and cooling approaches to mitigate range 
    reduction.
        9. Describe how the weight/size of the battery pack will affect the 
    driving range on dual fueled electric passenger cars. What determines 
    this result?
        10. Does the specific driving range of dual fueled electric cars 
    create any environmental impacts that could be mitigated by choosing a 
    different range or battery capacity? Please discuss the basis for your 
    answer (e.g., (1) setting the minimum driving range so high that 
    manufacturers could meet it only with battery technologies that employ 
    more harmful chemicals, (2) setting the minimum driving range so high 
    that manufacturers would be discouraged from trying to meet it, or so 
    low that consumers wouldn't buy it, thus delaying the development or 
    use of these cleaner technologies, and (3) setting the minimum driving 
    range so low that the consumer would frequently be forced to use the 
    more polluting non-electric fuel.)
        11. For longer driving range on electric power, please discuss any 
    significant safety or fire problems for the occupants of the dual 
    fueled car or any object with which the car may collide. Is there an 
    optimum battery capacity that would minimize potential safety problems 
    for the electrolyte spillage, shock or fire? Please explain your 
    answer.
        12. Would the driveability (i.e., handling and performance) of a 
    dual fueled electric car be penalized by a requirement for a driving 
    range comparable to that for typical gasoline-fueled cars? Can an 
    optimum driving range standard for dual fueled electric vehicles be 
    established from driveability considerations? Please explain your 
    answer.
        13. Is it likely that dual fueled electric passenger car 
    applications may have decreased performance capabilities when powered 
    by electricity (e.g., predominately city driving, acceleration, top 
    speed, and gradeability limit) and consequently result in lower 
    consumer expectations for driving range. Please discuss your answer.
        14. How do style or appearance considerations affect the space for 
    the batteries and, therefore, minimum driving range? How will minimum 
    driving range limit the storage space in the trunk of the vehicle?
        15. What other factors, if any, should the agency consider in 
    establishing the driving ranges for dual fueled electric passenger cars 
    when operated on electricity?
        16. What do you recommend as the minimum driving range for dual 
    fueled electric passenger cars when operating on electricity?
        17. What safety problems could arise if both battery acid and the 
    second fuel spilled and mixed during an accident?
        18. What kinds of range extenders are manufacturers considering for 
    use in dual fueled electric vehicles (e.g., flywheels, hydraulic 
    accumulators, small range heat engines, fuel cell systems, etc.)?
        NHTSA solicits public comments on this notice. It is requested but 
    not required that 10 copies be submitted.
        All comments must not exceed 15 pages in length (49 CFR 553.21). 
    Necessary attachments may be appended to these submissions without 
    regard to the 15-page limit. This limitation is intended to encourage 
    commenters to detail their primary arguments in a concise fashion.
        If a commenter wishes to submit certain information under a claim 
    of confidentiality, three copies of the complete submission, including 
    purportedly confidential business information, should be submitted to 
    the Chief Counsel, NHTSA, at the street address given above, and seven 
    copies from which the purportedly confidential information has been 
    deleted should be submitted to the Docket Section. A request for 
    confidentiality should be accompanied by a cover letter setting forth 
    the information specified in the agency's confidential business 
    information regulation 49 CFR part 512.
        All comments received before the close of business on the comment 
    closing date indicated above will be considered. Comments in response 
    to this request for comments will be available for inspection in the 
    docket. NHTSA will continue to file relevant information as it becomes 
    available in the docket after the closing date, and it is recommended 
    that interested persons continue to examine the docket for new 
    material.
        Those persons desiring to be notified upon receipt on their 
    comments in the dockets should enclose a self-addressed, stamped 
    envelope with their comments, the docket supervisor will return the 
    postcard by mail.
    
    (49 U.S.C. 32901(c); delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.50 and 49 
    CFR 501.8)
    
        Issued on: September 19, 1994.
    Barry Felrice,
    Associate Administrator for Rulemaking.
    [FR Doc. 94-23455 Filed 9-21-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-59-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
09/22/1994
Department:
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Request for comments.
Document Number:
94-23455
Dates:
Comments must be received by November 21, 1994.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: September 22, 1994, Docket No. 94-35, Notice 1
RINs:
2127-AF37: Driving Range Determination for Dual Fuel Electric Passenger Automobiles
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2127-AF37/driving-range-determination-for-dual-fuel-electric-passenger-automobiles
CFR: (1)
49 CFR 538