News Topic - Hyundai
Articles 1 - 10 of most recent articles
Priest leaves McNeil Island job in protest of state religion rule in prisons
The Rev. Tom Suss spent Monday afternoon at McNeil Island prison loading the contents of his office into his Hyundai Elantra. His last official day is today.
The News Tribune – May 14, 2008 1:59 PM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Washington: Seattle-Tacoma
The Rev. Tom Suss spent Monday afternoon at McNeil Island prison loading the contents of his office into his Hyundai Elantra. His last official day is today.
The News Tribune – May 14, 2008 1:59 PM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Washington: Seattle-Tacoma
Manly Hyundai Announces A Great Double Offer On The 2008 Hyundai Sonata.
Manly Hyundai, the leading dealer for Hyundai vehicles in Santa Rosa, California, has announced a great double offer of a 0% APR for 72 months plan and an additional $500 off on the 2008 Hyundai Sonata.
1888PressRelease.com – May 14, 2008 12:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Top Stories: Press Releases
Manly Hyundai, the leading dealer for Hyundai vehicles in Santa Rosa, California, has announced a great double offer of a 0% APR for 72 months plan and an additional $500 off on the 2008 Hyundai Sonata.
1888PressRelease.com – May 14, 2008 12:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Top Stories: Press Releases
Manly Hyundai Announces Its Huge Summer Used Car Sales Event.
Manly Hyundai, the leading dealer for Hyundai vehicles in Santa Rosa, California, has announced its Giant Summer Used Car Sales Event.
1888PressRelease.com – May 14, 2008 12:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Top Stories: Press Releases
Manly Hyundai, the leading dealer for Hyundai vehicles in Santa Rosa, California, has announced its Giant Summer Used Car Sales Event.
1888PressRelease.com – May 14, 2008 12:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Top Stories: Press Releases
Hyundai shelves U.S. plan for pickups
SEOUL, South Korea -- Hyundai Motor Co. shelved plans to build pickup trucks in the United States as soaring gas prices chip away at demand for trucks, a company official said Tuesday.
Detnews.com – May 13, 2008 1:53 PM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Michigan: Detroit
SEOUL, South Korea -- Hyundai Motor Co. shelved plans to build pickup trucks in the United States as soaring gas prices chip away at demand for trucks, a company official said Tuesday.
Detnews.com – May 13, 2008 1:53 PM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Michigan: Detroit
Amherst girl injured in crash improves slightly at Baystate Medical Center
Amherst police continue to probe the accident in which a Hyundai rear-ended a parked bus.
MassLive.com – May 13, 2008 12:35 PM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Massachusetts: Springfield
Amherst police continue to probe the accident in which a Hyundai rear-ended a parked bus.
MassLive.com – May 13, 2008 12:35 PM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Massachusetts: Springfield
McAllen not in talks with Hyundai : Local News
McALLEN — McAllen City Manager Mike Perez says city officials are not in talks with Hyundai Motor Co., but he wouldn’t confirm which automaker is considering building a plant here.“I can’t say anything except it’s not Hyundai,” Perez said Sunday.After McAllen Mayor Richard Cortez announced last week the city was in negotiations with an automaker, there was speculation the Korean automaker had renewed its interest in the Rio Grande Valley.
Valley Morning Star – May 13, 2008 12:08 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Texas: Harlingen
McALLEN — McAllen City Manager Mike Perez says city officials are not in talks with Hyundai Motor Co., but he wouldn’t confirm which automaker is considering building a plant here.“I can’t say anything except it’s not Hyundai,” Perez said Sunday.After McAllen Mayor Richard Cortez announced last week the city was in negotiations with an automaker, there was speculation the Korean automaker had renewed its interest in the Rio Grande Valley.
Valley Morning Star – May 13, 2008 12:08 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Texas: Harlingen
Eight-year old girl critical after car hits bus in Amherst
At 23-year-old Greenfield woman was driving a Hyundai accent which struck the rear of a PVTA bus aroudn 8 this morning.
MassLive.com – May 12, 2008 5:40 PM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Massachusetts: Springfield
At 23-year-old Greenfield woman was driving a Hyundai accent which struck the rear of a PVTA bus aroudn 8 this morning.
MassLive.com – May 12, 2008 5:40 PM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Local: Massachusetts: Springfield
Hydrogen Cars Won't Make a Difference for 40 Years
President Bush, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the big automakers agree on this much: They love hydrogen-powered fuel cell technology and its promise of a zero-emission, petroleum-free future. Unfortunately, experts say it will be 40 years or more before hydrogen has any meaningful impact on gasoline consumption or global warming, and we can't afford to wait that long. In the meantime, fuel cells are diverting resources from more immediate solutions. "As a climate strategy, it's not very good," said Dr. Joseph Romm, executive director of the Center for Energy and Climate Solutions and author of The Hype About Hydrogen: Fact and Fiction in the Race to Save the Climate. "We don't have the time." Climate experts and alternative-fuel researchers, including some hydrogen proponents, agree that hydrogen is at best a long-term solution. In the short and medium term, however, other technologies offer far greater benefit at far less cost: Cleaner internal combustion engines, hybrids and plug-in hybrids. Some worry that these near-term solutions are being short-changed. But hydrogen advocates counter that the answer isn't cutting hydrogen funding, but increasing funding for research into a wide variety of alternatives to oil. "The few million we're spending to change our energy policy is like sending one platoon to Normandy," said Paul Williamson, director of the Hydrogen and Alternative Energy Research and Development program at the University of Montana. "It's just not going to happen." To some extent, politicians and policymakers recognize that hydrogen remains a long way off, which is one reason the California Air Resources Board has told automakers to build 58,000 plug-in hybrids by 2014. And automakers are building cleaner gasoline and diesel engines while developing hybrids. But the emphasis remains squarely on hydrogen. Congress appropriated $283.5 million for the Hydrogen Fuel Initiative this year, bringing its investment to $1.16 billion since 2004. California's "Hydrogen Highway" may be floundering, but the Air Resources Board is handing out $7.7 million to build hydrogen stations even though the last three agencies to receive state funding gave it back. Many hurdles remain to be cleared before hydrogen is a viable source of energy -- not the least of which are making, storing and distributing it on a large scale. Meeting these challenges will require, in the words of several hydrogen proponents, a "Manhattan Project"-level of research and funding. And we're a long way from the hydrogen economy President Bush envisioned in his 2003 State of the Union.The transition has begun though, and California is leading the way even as it keeps relaxing the rule dictating how many electric and hydrogen vehicles automakers must build. There are 175 fuel cell vehicles in California and more coming. Honda will begin leasing its hydrogen-powered Clarity FCX this summer and General Motors will put its Equinox fuel cell vehicles in 100 driveways this year. Hyundai plans to begin mass-producing fuel cells cars in 2012, and GM -- which has invested more than $1 billion in hydrogen -- says it will have 1,000 vehicles on the road in California by 2014. But few people expect to see fuel cell vehicles in showrooms before 2020, and we won't see any large-scale benefit from them until 30 years after that. "2050 is when hydrogen might -- might -- have a significant impact," said John Heywood, director of the Sloan Automotive Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The timeline has more to do with economics than science. There are roughly 240 million vehicles in America and about 16 million new vehicles sold each year. That means it takes about 15 years to turn over the fleet. But it takes even longer for new technologies to penetrate the market. Heywood cites hybrids as an example. They may seem ubiquitous, but after 10 years, hybrids accounted for just 2.2 percent of domestic auto sales last year. Run the numbers and Heywood estimates fuel cell vehicles will need 25 years to make up 35 percent of new vehicle sales and 20 years beyond that to get to 35 percent of the U.S. fleet. We can't wait that long. Scientists increasingly agree that industrialized nations must cut greenhouse gas emissions as much as 80 percent by 2050 if we are to curb global warming. The Environmental Protection Agency says fuel economy may have to rise to 75 mpg within 30 years to hit that target. California law requires easing emissions even further than that by 2050. Hitting these targets will require putting 379,000 zero-emission vehicles on the road by 2020 and 7.6 million by 2050, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists. Hydrogen critics argue that plug-in hybrids and electric vehicles are the answer. But electricity brings its own challenges. Plug-in technology can cut fuel consumption by up to 62 percent, but it adds $8,000 to $11,000 to the cost of the car, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (.pdf). EVs like the Subaru R1e and Mitsubishi's MiEV have a range of no more than 100 miles. The Tesla Roadster gets 220 miles and charges in about 3½ hours, but it costs $98,000 and its lithium-ion battery pack which weighs 1,000 pounds. "The reality is, as much as everyone in the industry has hoped for affordable, high energy batteries, they don't exist yet," said Ron Cogan, editor of GreenCar.com and Green Car Journal. "We're not there yet with battery electric vehicles or hydrogen. We're on a path to both." And we'll need both if we're to address global warming and our dependence on oil, climate experts say. Even critics like Romm aren't suggesting we scrap hydrogen entirely. For all its challenges, hydrogen still presents the opportunity, however distant, for a sustainable source of energy that can displace petroleum. For now, the issue isn't electrics or hydrogen but electrics and hydrogen. "Given that timeline and the number of vehicles we're talking about, we have to keep working on battery electric vehicle and fuel cell vehicles at the same time," said Spencer Quong of the Union of Concerned Scientists. "Both of them have huge challenges, and if we don't work on both of them, we won't meet our objectives."
Wired News – May 12, 2008 01:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Technology
President Bush, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the big automakers agree on this much: They love hydrogen-powered fuel cell technology and its promise of a zero-emission, petroleum-free future. Unfortunately, experts say it will be 40 years or more before hydrogen has any meaningful impact on gasoline consumption or global warming, and we can't afford to wait that long. In the meantime, fuel cells are diverting resources from more immediate solutions. "As a climate strategy, it's not very good," said Dr. Joseph Romm, executive director of the Center for Energy and Climate Solutions and author of The Hype About Hydrogen: Fact and Fiction in the Race to Save the Climate. "We don't have the time." Climate experts and alternative-fuel researchers, including some hydrogen proponents, agree that hydrogen is at best a long-term solution. In the short and medium term, however, other technologies offer far greater benefit at far less cost: Cleaner internal combustion engines, hybrids and plug-in hybrids. Some worry that these near-term solutions are being short-changed. But hydrogen advocates counter that the answer isn't cutting hydrogen funding, but increasing funding for research into a wide variety of alternatives to oil. "The few million we're spending to change our energy policy is like sending one platoon to Normandy," said Paul Williamson, director of the Hydrogen and Alternative Energy Research and Development program at the University of Montana. "It's just not going to happen." To some extent, politicians and policymakers recognize that hydrogen remains a long way off, which is one reason the California Air Resources Board has told automakers to build 58,000 plug-in hybrids by 2014. And automakers are building cleaner gasoline and diesel engines while developing hybrids. But the emphasis remains squarely on hydrogen. Congress appropriated $283.5 million for the Hydrogen Fuel Initiative this year, bringing its investment to $1.16 billion since 2004. California's "Hydrogen Highway" may be floundering, but the Air Resources Board is handing out $7.7 million to build hydrogen stations even though the last three agencies to receive state funding gave it back. Many hurdles remain to be cleared before hydrogen is a viable source of energy -- not the least of which are making, storing and distributing it on a large scale. Meeting these challenges will require, in the words of several hydrogen proponents, a "Manhattan Project"-level of research and funding. And we're a long way from the hydrogen economy President Bush envisioned in his 2003 State of the Union.The transition has begun though, and California is leading the way even as it keeps relaxing the rule dictating how many electric and hydrogen vehicles automakers must build. There are 175 fuel cell vehicles in California and more coming. Honda will begin leasing its hydrogen-powered Clarity FCX this summer and General Motors will put its Equinox fuel cell vehicles in 100 driveways this year. Hyundai plans to begin mass-producing fuel cells cars in 2012, and GM -- which has invested more than $1 billion in hydrogen -- says it will have 1,000 vehicles on the road in California by 2014. But few people expect to see fuel cell vehicles in showrooms before 2020, and we won't see any large-scale benefit from them until 30 years after that. "2050 is when hydrogen might -- might -- have a significant impact," said John Heywood, director of the Sloan Automotive Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The timeline has more to do with economics than science. There are roughly 240 million vehicles in America and about 16 million new vehicles sold each year. That means it takes about 15 years to turn over the fleet. But it takes even longer for new technologies to penetrate the market. Heywood cites hybrids as an example. They may seem ubiquitous, but after 10 years, hybrids accounted for just 2.2 percent of domestic auto sales last year. Run the numbers and Heywood estimates fuel cell vehicles will need 25 years to make up 35 percent of new vehicle sales and 20 years beyond that to get to 35 percent of the U.S. fleet. We can't wait that long. Scientists increasingly agree that industrialized nations must cut greenhouse gas emissions as much as 80 percent by 2050 if we are to curb global warming. The Environmental Protection Agency says fuel economy may have to rise to 75 mpg within 30 years to hit that target. California law requires easing emissions even further than that by 2050. Hitting these targets will require putting 379,000 zero-emission vehicles on the road by 2020 and 7.6 million by 2050, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists. Hydrogen critics argue that plug-in hybrids and electric vehicles are the answer. But electricity brings its own challenges. Plug-in technology can cut fuel consumption by up to 62 percent, but it adds $8,000 to $11,000 to the cost of the car, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (.pdf). EVs like the Subaru R1e and Mitsubishi's MiEV have a range of no more than 100 miles. The Tesla Roadster gets 220 miles and charges in about 3½ hours, but it costs $98,000 and its lithium-ion battery pack which weighs 1,000 pounds. "The reality is, as much as everyone in the industry has hoped for affordable, high energy batteries, they don't exist yet," said Ron Cogan, editor of GreenCar.com and Green Car Journal. "We're not there yet with battery electric vehicles or hydrogen. We're on a path to both." And we'll need both if we're to address global warming and our dependence on oil, climate experts say. Even critics like Romm aren't suggesting we scrap hydrogen entirely. For all its challenges, hydrogen still presents the opportunity, however distant, for a sustainable source of energy that can displace petroleum. For now, the issue isn't electrics or hydrogen but electrics and hydrogen. "Given that timeline and the number of vehicles we're talking about, we have to keep working on battery electric vehicle and fuel cell vehicles at the same time," said Spencer Quong of the Union of Concerned Scientists. "Both of them have huge challenges, and if we don't work on both of them, we won't meet our objectives."
Wired News – May 12, 2008 01:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Technology
Hyundai Magic Has Finance Plans On Its Online Dealership
Hyundai Magic, leading dealership for Hyundai vehicles in Fort Worth, TX, has two sections pertaining to finance on its dealership website. For more details, contact the dealership at 817-367-4000.
1888PressRelease.com – May 10, 2008 12:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Top Stories: Press Releases
Hyundai Magic, leading dealership for Hyundai vehicles in Fort Worth, TX, has two sections pertaining to finance on its dealership website. For more details, contact the dealership at 817-367-4000.
1888PressRelease.com – May 10, 2008 12:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Top Stories: Press Releases
Tony Hyundai Presents $1000 Rebate On The Brand New 2008 Veracruz And Tucson For This Mother's Day
Tony Hyundai, the leading Hyundai dealership in Waipahu, HI, is offering $1000 rebate on the brand new 2008 Hyundai Veracruz and Tucson models for this year's Mother's Day. For details, contact Tony Hyundai or log on to http://www.tonyhyundai.com/.
1888PressRelease.com – May 10, 2008 12:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Top Stories: Press Releases
Tony Hyundai, the leading Hyundai dealership in Waipahu, HI, is offering $1000 rebate on the brand new 2008 Hyundai Veracruz and Tucson models for this year's Mother's Day. For details, contact Tony Hyundai or log on to http://www.tonyhyundai.com/.
1888PressRelease.com – May 10, 2008 12:00 AM [GMT] ¦ comment?
found in Top Stories: Press Releases