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Nissan Leaf electric wins Japan car of the year
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Dec 3, 2011


Japanese motor giant Nissan won Car of the Year Japan at the Tokyo Motor Show on Saturday for its Leaf electric model, its makers said, the first time an electric vehicle has picked up the award.

Electric cars with cutting-edge green technology and vehicles remote-controlled by smartphones have been a star feature at this year's show, which runs till December 11 and features 179 exhibitors from a dozen countries.

"Nissan is proud to announce that its 100 percent electric Leaf car has won the Japanese Car of the Year prize," Japan's second-largest automaker said in a statement.

The Nissan Leaf electric is a zero-emission vehicle fitted with rechargeable lithium-ion batteries. Since its launch on the market at the end of last year, some 20,000 models have been sold, notably in Japan and in the US.

"All these accolades show that zero-emission vehicles can clearly be competitive alternatives to conventional ones," Nissan President and CEO Carlos Ghosn said.

Nissan, which is part-owned by France's Renault, has invested some 4 billion euros ($5 bn) in the development of these electric cars.

Ghosn said that in five years, Nissan and Renault will have sold 1.5 million of the vehicles, and estimated the world market for electric cars would jump from 0.05 percent today, to 15 percent in ten years.

The hybrid (fuel and electric) would also see an increase from 1 percent today to between 5 and 10 percent over the same period, Ghosn added.

Nissan is trailing several electric concept vehicles at the Motor Show, including the Pivo 3, which can be remotely manoeuvered with a smart phone.

It has installed automotive telematics in the Leaf electric car, allowing drivers to remotely control the air conditioning system and check on a car's battery using their smart phone or personal computer.

Several major foreign manufacturers who skipped the last show are also back this year, including Germany's Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes and Porsche; French carmakers Renault and Peugeot-Citroen and Britain's Jaguar and Land Rover.

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France's Renault to recall 1,411 cars in China
Beijing (AFP) Dec 2, 2011 - French car maker Renault will recall more than 1,400 cars due to a potentially hazardous fault with the steering system, China's quality watchdog has said.

The recall concerns a batch of Koleos sport-utility vehicles that were imported to China, the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said in a statement Thursday.

The defect could make steering difficult and lead to safety hazards in "extreme situations", said the statement, adding that Renault will fix the fault and return the cars to their owners.

The recall will start from December 26 and affects 1,411 cars -- around 10 percent of Renault's sales in the country last year.

In 2009 Renault recalled 2,136 Koleos, also due to steering defects, according to previous Chinese state media reports.

"This is a preventive measure," said Lin Hua, the head of Renault in China, adding that the fault had not caused any accidents in China.



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At a crossroads who runs the red light
Boston, MA (SPX) Dec 02, 2011
In 2008, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 2.3 million automobile crashes occurred at intersections across the United States, resulting in some 7,000 deaths. More than 700 of those fatalities were due to drivers running red lights. But, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, half of the people killed in such accidents are not the drivers who ... read more


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