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Friday, August 24, 2007
Ed Feulner :: Townhall.com Columnist
Fueling the Push for a Better Car
by Ed Feulner
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Today’s modern technology would doubtless awe the people whose pioneering work made it possible. If Alexander Graham Bell flipped open a cell phone or Philo T. Farnsworth watched a high-def television, they’d be dumbfounded. Technology has taken their relatively crude inventions and made them immeasurably better.

But suppose Henry Ford took a spin in a 2007 Lincoln Town Car. He’d undoubtedly be impressed with the leather seats, the thunderous sound system and the power windows. But when he looked under the hood, he’d feel right at home.

Sure, the internal combustion engine’s been improved since the Model T days. For example, fuel injection has replaced the carburetor, and electronic ignition eliminated the crank. But Mr. Ford would certainly recognize the basic system: An 8-cylinder engine burns gasoline to turn the wheels and drive the passengers.

It’s long past time to improve this design, and it’s critical that we do so.

Think of it this way: Policymakers stress the importance of reducing our dependence on foreign oil. To do this, they’ve subsidized ethanol and passed automotive fuel economy standards, among other things. But none of these measures have worked -- and they won’t. To use less foreign oil, we need to make the internal combustion engine obsolete, by creating the next generation automobile -- a car that doesn’t run on gas.

That may sound impossible, but it isn’t. Somewhere there’s an inventor who can design an affordable car that runs on clean fuel. This person simply needs the right incentive, and here’s where private groups and foundations can help.

They could use the Ansari X Prize as a model. That competition promised $10 million to the first team that could put a man into low-earth orbit. Eventually, 26 teams from all around the world vied for the prize. To fund their efforts, these inventors lined up $100 million worth of private research and development -- R & D worth far more than the prize that was eventually handed out in 2004.

For a similarly small investment, foundations could encourage private citizens, academics and auto industry experts to develop the next generation car. Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Edwin Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Townhall.com Gold Partner, and co-author of Getting America Right: The True Conservative Values Our Nation Needs Today .
 
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Radlad...
One doesn't have to be a "liberal" to dislike cars. I'm as conservative as they come. I mean conservative as in liking to conserve things, not waste things. (Not only that, but I'm also socially conservative and fiscally conservative - just not particularly "neo" conservative - but I digress.)

On the other hand, those folks who like to squander things are liberals, as in liberally suck as much oil out of the ground as they can, and burn it for fun and profit.

My children have an insatiable appetite for chocolate chip cookies. Sadly, in order to maintain nutritional balance, the government (i.e. us, the parents) must curb demand by making the cookies more expensive than they otherwise might be. We, the government, put additional taxes on the cookies such as requiring washing of the dishes. Without these demand curbs, our obscenely large GFP would easily be able to buy more cookies than existed in the local emporium, and we would be forced to raid neighbouring town's emporia, which would probably cause the citizens of such towns to not like us very much.

Now I ask you: are we, the home government, conservative or liberal? Conservative because we don't waste our resources on excess cookies (and like to look after our children's health), or liberal because we "tax" to "manipulate the market" in "socially desirable directions"?

SteveL,,,
hit the nail on the head - oversize and overpowered cars are all about status. In this country of 300M it is hard to stand out. Possessing a roving rustbucket-in-the-making which is higher, wider, longer or simply more expensive than ones neighbor's puts one a rung up the pecking order.

Of course, the wily auto makers and oilmen ensure that all 300M of us can buy these things and afford to run them. Woo-hoo! Nope - there's no feeling like being stuck in traffic in a Mercedes/Lexus/Corvette/(fill in your favorite). Nothing compares with the thrill of speeding along at all of 55mph on the country roads! (Well, maybe the thrill of being pulled over by a cop after doing 65).

Folks like Audir10 should welcome gas at $10/gal. It would clear a lot of the riff-raff from the road, so that true enthusiasts could strut their stuff.
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