Hyundai to Start Selling LPG-Electric Hybrid in July 2009:
The Breakthrough We've Been Waiting For - VIDEO ENHANCED

Hyundai Elantra LPG-Electric
Hybrid
|
No Gasoline Needed...Propane and Electric
We Must Get These Vehicles in America
• World’s first LPI hybrid, first to use advanced Lithium-Polymer
batteries
• Operation costs poised to be lowest of any hybrid in the market
• “Hybrid premium” cost can be recouped in two years through
fuel savings
• Emits just 103g/km of CO2 and 90% fewer pollutants to
qualify as Super Ultra Low Emission Vehicle
• Initial sales restricted to Korea
SEOUL - July 8, 2008: Hyundai Motor Company plans to start retail sales of its
first LPG-electric hybrid vehicle in July 2009. To be sold initially in the
Korean domestic market under the Avante badge, the Elantra LPI Hybrid
Electric Vehicle (HEV) is the world’s first hybrid vehicle to be
powered by liquid petroleum gas (LPG) and the first to adopt advanced
Lithium Polymer (Li-Poly) batteries.
EDITOR'S NOTE: About two weeks ago The Auto Channel began a new multi-part series
titled "No New Gasoline-Powered Vehicles By 2014." In Part 1, we talked about the use of propane (LPG) as
a readily available, low-cost alternative to gasoline. Hyundai's initiative to use LPG with batteries,
instead of gasoline as with the existing hybrids, is a fantastic step. Now we have to encourage Hyundai to
make these hybrids available in North America and then get some of the other OEMs to jump on board. Way to go, Hyundai!
Powered by a Liquefied Petroleum Injected (LPI) Gamma engine displacing
1.6 litres, a 15kW electric motor and a continuously variable transmission,
the Elantra LPI HEV is a mild-type hybrid capable of delivering a
competitive fuel economy rating.
“The Elantra LPI HEV demonstrates Hyundai’s innovative
approach: We have leveraged Hyundai’s world leadership in LPG-fueled
vehicles to develop a hybrid that will be very economical to
operate,” said Dr. Hyun-Soon Lee, president of the Research and
Development Division.
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