Toyota Chairman: Shift to Electric Vehicles Will Not Be Rapid

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain

Mazda is planning for the internal combustion engine of 2050. Toyota is applying the Dynamic Force improvements that worked wonders on the 2018 Camry’s fuel economy ratings to V6 and V8 engines.

And electric cars?

“We’re skeptical there would be a rapid shift to pure electric vehicles, given questions over user convenience,” Toyota chairman Takeshi Uchiyamada tells CNBC.

There is a Toyota electric car in your future, Uchiyamada believes. But more likely than not, it’s not in your near future.

Toyota was and continues to be at the forefront of hybrid development. Through the first seven months of 2017, for example, 49 percent of the hybrids and plug-in hybrids sold in the United States of America were Toyota products, according to HybridCars.com.

Toyota’s hybrid total alone — 126,155 vehicles during that period — was three times stronger than the overall sales total at Volvo, which recently made headlines with a plan that will see all new vehicle introductions involve hybrid or electric powertrains beginning in 2019.

But on the pure electric front, Toyota’s chairman believes a few more breakthroughs are needed on the technological front if battery-powered vehicles are to become fully capable. “I must say up front that we’re not against electric vehicles,” says Uchiyamada. “But in order for electric vehicles to cover long distances, they currently need to be loaded with a lot of batteries that take a considerable amount of time to charge.”

“There’s also the issue of battery life,” Uchiyamada says, who cites battery limitations as a key reason consumers aren’t embracing electric vehicles.

Toyota does not currently offer a pure EV in the United States. The Mirai is a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle. The Prius Prime is a plug-in hybrid with 25 miles of electric range. Those two vehicles account for slightly less than 1 percent of the 1,604,847 total vehicles sold by Toyota in the U.S. through the first two-thirds of 2017.

In the United States, the EV market accounts for 1 out of every 200 new vehicles sold. The overwhelming majority of those EV sales take place at three automakers: Tesla, Nissan, and Chevrolet.

[Images: Toyota]

Timothy Cain is a contributing analyst at The Truth About Cars and Autofocus.ca and the founder and former editor of GoodCarBadCar.net. Follow on Twitter @timcaincars.

Timothy Cain
Timothy Cain

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  • Lou_BC Lou_BC on Sep 05, 2017

    "Shift to Electric Vehicles Will Not Be Rapid" Shocking!

  • Tosh Tosh on Sep 05, 2017

    Japan Inc is in cahoots with oil companies in exchange for military protection. Japanese fuel cell research -> protection racket.

  • Blueice "You're describing a police state, not Communism or Marxism.'" Flyer, they are part and parcel. The Cheka and Gestapo were bothused as criminal police and political enforcement. FBI has reformatted itself into another Cheka. BTW, the Oilers looked impotent last night! I own a ED clinic and they are welcome for free treatment, with a dozen of pucks and sticks.
  • 3-On-The-Tree I was referring to my 2009 C6 Corvette which is pretty low to the ground probably lower than a stock challenger. I’m retired and disabled from the Army and I have to sit in sideways and pull my legs in and reverse to get out. I also drive a 2021 Tundra Crewmax and like it because it has a lot of room making entry and exit easier.
  • EBFlex "Dystopia indicates a state of great suffering or injustice, typically one that is totalitarian or post-apocalyptic. Or, simply that Matt has a flare for the dramatic."Daily reminder everything TrollGhost says is a lie and he thinks a diesel engine has no emissions.
  • Tane94 Too wagon-ish to succeed in the U.S. See Volvo V60 and V90 and Buick Regal X for reference.
  • Golden2husky I'd never recommend a modern Ford at this moment in time - not only the continual recalls, but there seems to be a lot of marginal parts and poor engineering ideas (an internal water pump, really?)...Almost overnight I am seeing Cybertrucks with increasing frequency. Teslas in general are thick on the ground around here but was surprised to see the trucks appear so quickly. They need better assembly quality and in the right light, some of the stainless panels seem to be a different hue from the neighboring panel.
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