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Natural Gas Cars Remain Niche Choice for Bay Area Commuters

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2012 Honda Civic Natural Gas. (Photo: Honda Motor Co.)

2012 Honda Civic Natural Gas
2012 Honda Civic Natural Gas. (Photo: Honda Motor Co.)

Last July, the State of California told 85,000 hybrid car owners they could no longer drive solo in carpool lanes. That perk was designed to spur sales of clean-burning cars. The end of the incentive for hybrids sent thousands of long-distance solo commuters looking for an even greener car that would be eligible to stay in the diamond lane. The 2012 Honda Civic Natural Gas is one option, the only new car in the U.S. market that runs on CNG. It's eligible for a white HOV (High-Occupancy Vehicle) lane decal—granted only to cars that run on compressed natural gas or purely on electricity. But adoption of CNG cars is only slightly increasing.

Benefits of CNG

Like an EV, the cost of fueling a CNG car is less than half that of a gas-powered vehicle. CNG-driving commuters also enjoy a 50 percent discount for tolls on Bay Area bridges during commute times. While most all-electric cars are limited to about 80 reliable miles of range, the Honda Civic Natural Gas goes about 220 miles on a full tank of pressurized gaseous fuel.

“Our sales of the Civic CNG have more than doubled so far this year,” said Chris Rigalia, sales manager at Berkeley Honda, but the dealership only sold about a dozen of the cars throughout 2011. Now, Rigalia can’t get enough of Civic Natural Gas cars to meet demand. Berkeley Honda has already sold about 20 units so far this year and predicts selling another 20 before the end of 2012. This mismatch of supply and demand means that Berkeley Honda is charging a $1,000 to $2,000 premium over the $26,125 suggested retail price.

Natural gas pump for a CNG vehicle
(Photo: Honda Motor Co.)

Honda Motor Co. is aware of increased interest. “We just closed our best first quarter ever for CNG sales, just shy of 450 units,” said Eric Rosenberg, who is responsible for Honda’s national marketing of the Civic Natural Gas. Yet, Rosenberg said the company needs a few more months of sales before deciding to expand production.

Sponsored

So even though interest is expanding, the numbers remain extremely low and Honda is reluctant to ramp up volume. “I suspect Honda is unlikely to gamble with over production for a niche market,” said Dave Hurst, a transportation industry analyst at Pike Research.

The natural gas and fracking controversy

Maybe Honda is also hesitant to draw too much attention to the controversial issue of natural gas production via hydraulic fracturing. Fracking, as it is commonly known, is associated with a myriad of detrimental environmental impacts throughout the United States. Honda wouldn't take a position on fracking and referred me to the Drive Natural Gas Initiative, a project of the American Gas Association. Jake Rubin, AGA’s director of Public Relations, refused to say if eco-minded drivers should be dissuaded from buying a CNG car out of concerns about fracking. “We don’t have a position,” said Rubin.

Prices and locations for natural gas stations
Prices and station locations for natural gas

Obstacles to purchase

Despite the need for commuters to find economic ways to get back into the carpool lane, a number of factors are likely to limit the market for CNG cars, including: low inventory, lack of familiarity with the fuel, lack of filling stations (there are fewer than a dozen in the Bay Area) and questions about fracking.

Meanwhile, electric cars and plug-in hybrids, like the Chevy Volt and Toyota Prius Plug-in Hybrid, continue to generate a lot of buzz. These two cars have recently been granted green decals—which also give HOV access to solo drivers. Production and sales volume is solid and growing for these vehicles, which I suspect will become an increasingly common sight in the state’s carpool lanes.

See other posts from this series.

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