If you end up driving a 100-miles-per-gallon sedan in the next few years, you might be able to thank the Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize.
The contest has a $10 million prize for the company or team that builds vehicles that meet a series of criteria, including getting at least 100 miles to the gallon or its equivalent in other forms of energy.
(Image: The Tata Nano, a two-cyclinder model described as the world's cheapest car. To be marketed in India late this year. Although this car probably won't meet the requirements of the X Prize, Tata Motors has announced it will compete for the Automotive X Prize. Tata Motors Photo.)
What the contest doesn't do is mandate a technology. Thus, the car that wins could be electric, hybrid, compressed air, straight gasoline, or something entirely different. Learn more about the prize at www.progressiveautoxprize.org.
The prize has generated a lot of interest. In January there were 50 entrants, then 60, and there are now 70 teams from 12 countries. Electric seems to be the leading contender at present.
India's Tata Motors is the most recent entrant. An innovative company, they're the folks with the patent on the MDI compressed air car, and who this year announced plans to build the world's cheapest car, a $2,500 sedan called the Tata Nano.
They key to the new prize is that it will require some kind of technological leap. No production vehicle is currently anywhere close to meeting the X Prize requirements.
Other standards, according to the X Prize draft guidelines, are these.
The car needs to meet strict emissions standards, meaning it can't be energy-efficient but polluting. The limit is 200 grams of carbon dioxide per mile.
It needs to have at least four wheels and seat at least four people. (That's for X Prize's Mainstream Class. An Alternative Class can seat two or more and has no limit on number of wheels.)
Cars must have an enclosed cabin (although convertibles are permitted), windshield wipers, seat belts, standard gauges, heater, air conditioning. They need to meet U.S. safety standards—meaning they can legally be sold for highway use in this country—as well as meeting standards in other nations.
Automotive X Prize cars don't need to be howlers off the starting line, but they must be fast. The draft rules permit 0 to 60 acceleration in 12 seconds, but require the cars be able to reach or exceed 100 miles an hour. Recent comments suggest that top speed may be amended downward.
The cars must have a range of 200 miles before requiring refueling.
Detailed guidelines are available here: www.progressiveautoxprize.org/auto/prize-details/draft-guidelines. The rules, clearly, are not final, and could change over time.
The ultimate test is a pair of long-distance races during 2009 and 2010, a qualifier and a grand prize final. The winners of each will share the prize. The Mainstream Class will get ¾ of the purse and Alternative Class 1/4.
The cars will need to meet fuel efficiency and emissions standards, and if they qualify on those grounds, the fastest to the finish line will win the honors.
© 2007 Jan W. TenBruggencate
See also other automotive pieces in on this website:
raisingislands.blogspot.com/2008/05/hot-new-car-class-extended-range.html.
raisingislands.blogspot.com/2008/05/lingle-hawaii-electric-car-network.html.
raisingislands.blogspot.com/2008/01/cheap-nimble-inflatable-car.html.
raisingislands.blogspot.com/2007/12/air-cars-in-our-future-probably-but-not.html