So I'm pretty bummed. After doing hours and hours of research on the i, I'm thinking maybe it's not for me. And only because of the state I live in and how electricity is generated here.
I love the simplicity of the i. I thought it drove fine. I love the visibility and that it has enough cargo room for me. I like the funky look. The price would work, and I'd likely get all or most of the $7500 back. I have a very short commute (5-6 miles round trip) and I average about 10 miles per day when I look at the whole year. Plus, our city is not that big, so range is not an issue. My wife has a Civic that would work fine for us for longer trips. With such a short commute, I could probably get away with just the Level 1 charger, so no extra expense there.
Biking to work is not an option given the safety concerns on my route. I walk when I can, but that's very weather dependent.
So, my goal for my next car is to drive the greenest car out there within reason, price-wise. Right now it's down to the Prius C and Mitsu i. I found it very difficult to get an apples to apples comparison of how green these two were. Thanks to tonymil who posted this excellent link. I think he posted it on the Edmunds IL site.
http://www.ucsusa.org/assets/docume...ctric-car-global-warming-emissions-report.pdf
Anyway, a very nice analysis. I looked up my state, Kentucky. There's a nice chart in there that shows how much global warming emissions are produced by an i based on which region of the country you live in. So, for instance, the chart shows that an i in my region would produce as much emissions as a gasoline vehicle that got 46 MPG. Now, the Prius C rates at 53 City, which would initially make you think that the C is a better choice over the i. Ah, but I'm guessing my mileage in a C would be far lower than that. I'm thinking upper 30's maybe low 40's. I don't know this for a fact, and I'm anxious to see Consumer Reports City MPG when that comes out for the C. They rated my 1998 Civic at 21 MPG city, which is pretty spot on what I'm getting. I've also seen the low end for the C on Fuelly.com at about 39/40. So, now the i seems better if it's getting the equivalent of 46 MPG vs. 39/40 for the C. Ah, but there's more. When I dig deeper into how only my state (not my region) generates electricity, it turns out that 93% of our electricity is from burning coal.
http://www.getenergyactive.org/fuel/state.htm
The worst region listed in the first link is the Colorado area, and an i in that region would emit the equivalent of a 38 MPG gasoline engine. But if you look at the mix of fuels used to produce electricity there (found that in an appendix), it shows 71% by coal, 24% by natural gas. Another bad region is in the Midwest which gets 81% from coal. So Kentucky by itself appears to be worse (more coal - 93%) than the worst regions listed, so does that mean that an i here would produce emissions like a gas car that got less than 38 MPG? If so, the C seems to be better for me. Now, the one caveat is that maybe some of my electricity does come from Tennessee (within my region), so maybe less coal is used overall, but I can't seem to find out if this it true. I would guess since I use Kentucky Utilities (I read that they're at least 90% coal burning), that that's where my electric comes from.
One answer - move the heck out of this state. Not going to happen. I love my job, love the area (hiking), family's here, and someone has to be green around here in such a "red" state. Trying to fight the good fight.
Now if our state wakes up and starts producing electricity in a more green manner, then I'd have to give the i another look, but I don't see that happening soon.
I've loved reading this forum, and I'm always open to new information (so I'll keep reading here). This isn't a done deal. Thanks.
Sorry so long - this has consumed me lately.
I love the simplicity of the i. I thought it drove fine. I love the visibility and that it has enough cargo room for me. I like the funky look. The price would work, and I'd likely get all or most of the $7500 back. I have a very short commute (5-6 miles round trip) and I average about 10 miles per day when I look at the whole year. Plus, our city is not that big, so range is not an issue. My wife has a Civic that would work fine for us for longer trips. With such a short commute, I could probably get away with just the Level 1 charger, so no extra expense there.
Biking to work is not an option given the safety concerns on my route. I walk when I can, but that's very weather dependent.
So, my goal for my next car is to drive the greenest car out there within reason, price-wise. Right now it's down to the Prius C and Mitsu i. I found it very difficult to get an apples to apples comparison of how green these two were. Thanks to tonymil who posted this excellent link. I think he posted it on the Edmunds IL site.
http://www.ucsusa.org/assets/docume...ctric-car-global-warming-emissions-report.pdf
Anyway, a very nice analysis. I looked up my state, Kentucky. There's a nice chart in there that shows how much global warming emissions are produced by an i based on which region of the country you live in. So, for instance, the chart shows that an i in my region would produce as much emissions as a gasoline vehicle that got 46 MPG. Now, the Prius C rates at 53 City, which would initially make you think that the C is a better choice over the i. Ah, but I'm guessing my mileage in a C would be far lower than that. I'm thinking upper 30's maybe low 40's. I don't know this for a fact, and I'm anxious to see Consumer Reports City MPG when that comes out for the C. They rated my 1998 Civic at 21 MPG city, which is pretty spot on what I'm getting. I've also seen the low end for the C on Fuelly.com at about 39/40. So, now the i seems better if it's getting the equivalent of 46 MPG vs. 39/40 for the C. Ah, but there's more. When I dig deeper into how only my state (not my region) generates electricity, it turns out that 93% of our electricity is from burning coal.
http://www.getenergyactive.org/fuel/state.htm
The worst region listed in the first link is the Colorado area, and an i in that region would emit the equivalent of a 38 MPG gasoline engine. But if you look at the mix of fuels used to produce electricity there (found that in an appendix), it shows 71% by coal, 24% by natural gas. Another bad region is in the Midwest which gets 81% from coal. So Kentucky by itself appears to be worse (more coal - 93%) than the worst regions listed, so does that mean that an i here would produce emissions like a gas car that got less than 38 MPG? If so, the C seems to be better for me. Now, the one caveat is that maybe some of my electricity does come from Tennessee (within my region), so maybe less coal is used overall, but I can't seem to find out if this it true. I would guess since I use Kentucky Utilities (I read that they're at least 90% coal burning), that that's where my electric comes from.
One answer - move the heck out of this state. Not going to happen. I love my job, love the area (hiking), family's here, and someone has to be green around here in such a "red" state. Trying to fight the good fight.
Now if our state wakes up and starts producing electricity in a more green manner, then I'd have to give the i another look, but I don't see that happening soon.
I've loved reading this forum, and I'm always open to new information (so I'll keep reading here). This isn't a done deal. Thanks.
Sorry so long - this has consumed me lately.