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Ferrari aims to have future models of its
luxury sports line consume 40 percent less
fuel by 2012 in response to the growing
pressure on car makers to reduce CO2
emissions, said Amedeo Felisa. |
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Ferrari aims
to have future models of its luxury sports line consume
40 percent less fuel by 2012 in response to the growing
pressure on car makers to reduce CO2 emissions.
Amedeo Felisa,
general manager of the Italian luxury sports car maker, said
Ferrari wanted to reduce CO2 emissions from 400 grams per
kilometre per vehicle to 280-300 by the same target date.
"We have to face the challenge of reducing consumption but
not affecting the performance of the car," he said at the
Reuters Auto Summit in Frankfurt. "Otherwise we move (away)
from our position in the market and we do not want to do
that."
Felisa said
Ferrari engineers were looking at everything from improving
the performance of the engine to using lighter materials for
the body of the car. "The answer is efficiency," he said.
At a press event
at its headquarters in the north central town of Maranello
last summer, Ferrari showed off the Millechili, a concept
car that weighed less than existing models at 1,000
kilograms.
Ferrari, 85
percent owned by Fiat, invests 17 percent of its sales in
research and development. The European Commission is
preparing legislation to require average CO2 emissions from
new cars to come down to 120 grams per km by 2012. All of
the major car makers in Europe are far away from that goal
but some are making progress.
In the greater
scheme of things, Felisa said he did not think Ferrari was
causing much damage. "Our volumes will not ... affect the
environment," he said. For 2007, Ferrari aims to sell a
little more than 6,000 cars.
report &
photo courtesy of Reuters
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