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Hyundai’s been making so many announcements about electric vehicles and hybrids lately you’d think it was ZAP. The Korean automaker’s promised to put a hybrid subcompact, a hybrid mid-size and a plug-in competitor to the Chevrolet Volt on the road within five years. There’s even some speculation at least one of them could be stamped “Made in the USA.”
Hyundai’s going full-bore with its electric program, launching a partnership with Korean companies LG Chem, SK Energy and SB LiMotive to develop the batteries its cars will need whether they’re to start hitting the road by 2010 as promised. LG’s got a solid background, having provided some of the batteries General Motors is considering for the Volt. The Japanese dominate battery tech these days, but Hyundai says the Koreans could catch up by 2013 — at which point the company hopes to put a plug-in hybrid on the road. Korean automakers are spending nearly $1 billion on battery tech, and the government has kicked in $40 million.
We’ll see the first of the Hyundais to use that technology in November.
John Krafcik, Hyundai’s VP of product development, announced the new Sonata hybrid will invent its debut at the Los Angeles universal Auto Show in November and could be on the road by 2010. It’ll use a lithium-ion battery, making it the first partially-electric Sonata since Switched-On Bach.
Don’t mix up the gas-electric mid-size Sonata with another hybrid Hyundai in the works — a propane-electric hybrid based on the Avante
(known here in
even though its propane powertrain could produce a billionaire out of Hank
Hill.
Early signs propose the Sonata hybrid will be made in America. Hyundai spokesman Jim Trainor was coy when asked whether the hybrid will be built in the same Alabama factory that cranks out the standard Sonata (pictured) and would only say Southerners build some mighty fine cars. “The workforce down there and the products
they’re building are awesome,” Trainor told the Birmingham News. “The quality coming out of
the plant is awesome. Certainly careful consideration will
be given to those sorts of things when we’re looking at
where a vehicle like that will be built.”
Hyundai’s a rags-to-riches story
better than any early-evening nominating conference speaker could offer. From the
dowdy Excel to the overly tarted-up sedans of the early 2000s, Hyundai
has matured into the final “cocktail party car” — comfortable yet
unobtrusive, well-built but not overwrought. The incredible Genesis and stately Sonata
prove the carmaker has truly arrived.
Producing what could be the first lithium-ion hybrid to hit the street would be a major coup for Hyundai and a boon for Korean battery manufacturer LG.
Photo by Hyundai.
Original post by Keith Barry

























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