Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Alternative_fuel_vehicle> ?p ?o }
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle abstract "An alternative fuel vehicle is a vehicle that runs on a fuel other than traditional petroleum fuels (petrol or diesel); and also refers to any technology of powering an engine that does not involve solely petroleum (e.g. electric car, hybrid electric vehicles, solar powered). Because of a combination of factors, such as environmental concerns, high oil prices and the potential for peak oil, development of cleaner alternative fuels and advanced power systems for vehicles has become a high priority for many governments and vehicle manufacturers around the world.Hybrid electric vehicles such as the Toyota Prius are not actually alternative fuel vehicles, but through advanced technologies in the electric battery and motor/generator, they make a more efficient use of petroleum fuel. Other research and development efforts in alternative forms of power focus on developing all-electric and fuel cell vehicles, and even the stored energy of compressed air.As of 2011 there were more than one billion vehicles in use in the world, compared with over 100 million alternative fuel and advanced technology vehicles that had been sold or converted worldwide as of September 2015, and made up mainly of: About 48 million automobiles, motorcycles and light duty trucks manufactured and sold worldwide by mid 2015, led by Brazil with 29.5 million by mid 2015, followed by the United States with 17.4 million by the end of 2014, Canada with more than 600,000 by early 2008, and Sweden with 243,100 through December 2014. The Brazilian flex fuel fleet includes over 4 million flexible-fuel motorcycles produced since 2009 through March 2015. 22.7 million natural gas vehicles as of August 2015, led by China (4.4 million) Iran with 4.00 million, followed by Pakistan (3.70 million), Argentina (2.48 million), India (1.80 million) and Brazil (1.78 million).24.9 million LPG powered vehicles by December 2013, led by Turkey with 3.93 million, South Korea (2.4 million), and Poland (2.75 million).Over 10 million hybrid electric vehicles have been sold worldwide as of July 2015, led by Toyota Motor Company (TMC) with over 8 million Lexus and Toyota hybrids sold as of July 2015; followed by Honda Motor Co., Ltd. with cumulative global sales of more than 1.35 million hybrids as of June 2014; and Ford Motor Corporation with over 424 thousand hybrids sold in the United States through June 2015. As of July 2015, global hybrid sales are led by the Prius family, with sales of 5.264 million units delivered through July 2015. The Toyota Prius liftback is the leading model with cumulative sales of 3.527 million units through July 2015. Ranking second after the conventional Prius is the Toyota Aqua/Prius c, with global sales of 1.08 million units, followed by the Prius v/α/+ with over 582 thousand units sold. As of December 2014, Japan and the United States are the world's market leaders in hybrid sales, Japan with over 4 million units sold and the U.S. with more than 3.5 million. Cumulative European sales totaled over 925,000 hybrids through December 2014.5.7 million neat-ethanol only light-vehicles built in Brazil since 1979, with 2.4 to 3.0 million vehicles still in use by 2003. and 1.22 million units as of December 2011. Over one million highway legal plug-in electric passenger cars and light utility vehicless have been sold worldwide by mid-September 2015. As of August 2015, the United States is the market leader with over 363,000 plug-in electric cars delivered since 2008, followed by China with over 157,000 units sold since 2011, and Japan with more than 121,000 plug-in units sold since 2009. European sales are led by Norway with almost 66,000 new light-duty plug-in vehicles registered, followed by the Netherlands with over 61,000 all-electric cars and light utility vans, and France with over 59,000 plug-in electric vehicles registered. In the heavy-duty segment, China is the world's leader, with over 65,000 buses and sanitation vehicles sold through August 2015. By mid-September 2015, the Nissan Leaf is the world's all-time top selling highway-capable all-electric car, with global sales of approaching 200,000 units, followed by the Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid, which together with its sibling the Opel/Vauxhall Ampera has combined global sales of almost 100,000 units. Ranking third is the Tesla Model S with about 85,000 units sold worldwide through August 2015.An environmental analysis extends beyond just the operating efficiency and emissions. A life-cycle assessment of a vehicle involves production and post-use considerations. A cradle-to-cradle design is more important than a focus on a single factor such as the type of fuel.".
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle thumbnail 2007-2009_Toyota_Prius_Touring_--_03-16-2012.JPG?width=300.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink www.e85prices.com.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink www.greenfleet.info.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink catalog.php?record_id=18264.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink powering_ahead-kay_et_al-apr2013.pdf.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink 60448.pdf.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink stations.html.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink price_report.html.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink alternative-fuels-for-automobiles.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink www.green-car-guide.com.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink 2690341.html?page=1.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageExternalLink Q&A.asp.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageID "8340209".
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageLength "108532".
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageOutDegree "510".
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageRevisionID "706488049".
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink 1973_oil_crisis.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Airplane.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Alcohol.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Alternative_energy.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Alternatives_to_car_use.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink American_Solar_Challenge.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Ammonia.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Ammonia_production.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Argentina.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Armenia.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Asia-Pacific.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Audi_A3.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Autogas.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BMW_ActiveE.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BMW_X5_(F15).
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BMW_i3.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BMW_i8.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BYD_Auto.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BYD_F3DM.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BYD_Qin.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BYD_Tang.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BYD_e5.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink BYD_e6.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Battery_(electricity).
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Battery_electric_vehicle.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Bi-fuel_vehicle.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Biodiesel.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Black_liquor.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Boiler.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Bolloré_Bluecar.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Brazil.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink British_thermal_unit.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Buddy_(electric_car).
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Butanol_fuel.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink CG_150_Titan_Mix.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Cadillac_ELR.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink California.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink California_Air_Resources_Board.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Car.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Carbon_Trust.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Carburetor.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Alternative_fuels.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Emerging_technologies.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Green_vehicles.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Vehicle_technology.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Cetane_number.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Charcoal.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Chemrec.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Chery_QQ3.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Chevrolet.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Chevrolet_Spark.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Chevrolet_Volt.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Citroën.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink City_car.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Clean_Cities.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Climate_change.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Coal.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Colloquialism.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Combined_cycle.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Combustion_chamber.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Common_ethanol_fuel_mixtures.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Compressed-air_vehicle.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Compressed_natural_gas.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Corn_Belt.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Corporate_Average_Fuel_Economy.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Cradle-to-cradle_design.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Cryogenics.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Delphi_Automotive.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Department_of_Energy_and_Climate_Change.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Detonation.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Diesel_engine.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Diesel_fuel.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Dimethyl_ether.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Drive_shaft.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink E85.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink ENV.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Electric_car.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Electric_motor.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Electricity.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Energy_density.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Engine.
- Alternative_fuel_vehicle wikiPageWikiLink Engine_control_unit.