VOA标准英语2009年-Hybrids Hit Hard as Auto Sales Slide(在线收听) | ||||
Automobile sales have slumped around the world, with the latest data from December offering a grim outlook for some of the world's top car companies. Already, auto giant Toyota has announced plans to close its Japanese factories for 11 days in February and March in an attempt to reduce its inventory of unsold vehicles. One model that has been hit especially hard is the company's highly touted, fuel-efficient gasoline-electric hybrid. The world's largest car companies took a major hit in December, many of them seeing sales plunge by more than one-third. Among them, Japanese automaker Toyota, which reported a 37 percent drop in sales. Edmunds.com auto analyst Jesse Toprak says Toyota is struggling because of the types of cars consumers are willing to buy. "In terms of the types of cars that sold in December, we've seen the consumer preference tilting back to SUVs [sport utility vehicles] and trucks again," he said.
As a result, sales of Toyota's Prius hybrid - the best selling hybrid in the United States - tumbled 45 percent in December compared to the same time last year. And Toyota was not alone. Japan's number two automaker, Honda, saw U.S. sales of its hybrid vehicles drop almost 70 percent in December, selling only about 1,000 of the high-tech, fuel-efficient cars.
Toprak says that could affect plans to help retool America's "Big Three" car companies - Ford, Chrysler and General Motors. He says that if U.S. policymakers do not give consumers a financial incentive to buy fuel-efficient vehicles, encouraging Detroit to produce hybrids will not save the U.S. auto industry. | ||||
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2009/1/69027.html |