It's So Easy to be Green!
Especially when a site like Green Hybrid is there to help you out with anything and everything hybrid! See real owners with their cars and mileage numbers, and read up on all the latest alternative fuel news. Our favorite part? The "Real Hybrid Mileage Database" which tracks hybrid miles and compiles them into one database to get you accurate mileage readings. The slogan is "58,784,844 miles; 53,086 tanks; 3,595 cars; 1 database" Well, we're glad you did.
And from the Green Hybrid News Desk...
Lexus introduces its first $100,000 car
Lexus, Toyota's luxury brand, is set to price a north American vehicle in six figures for the first time as it broadens its target market to the upper echelons of wealthy car buyers.Bob Carter, general manager of the US Lexus division, said on Wednesday that the sticker price on the LS600 h petrol-electric hybrid sedan would be set at slightly over $100,000 when it is announced within the next few days.
Roadshow: U.S. driving public clamors for hybrid...
Toyota has had a hybrid minivan since 2001 and has plans to introduce a Sienna hybrid perhaps next year, seating eight. It supposedly will get about 40 miles per gallon, though the mileage will probably be lowered when new estimates are out next year. You may want to look at the Highlander SUV hybrid, which now offers three rows of seats. Chrysler said it would have a hybrid minivan someday, but it's never marketed a hybrid and one is likely many years away.
Common sense eco car launched
Serious eco auto geeks and clean green drivers in the GCC will rejoice this week at the launch of the c,mm,n (pronounced ‘common'), the world's first-ever open source car that is fueled by hydrogen. Until now, the concept of open source had only taken hold of the digital world, where open source software - like Mozilla Firefox and Linux - has been made readily available for to online communities that are able to copy, modify, and then publish their changes. Now the same idea is being applied to cars, where open source engines give drivers the chance to "potentially modify" the vehicle's fuel source.











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