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GM March U.S. Sales Boosted By Gas-sipping Models

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General Motors Co. passed an environmental milestone of sorts in March, when it became the first U.S. automaker to sell, in a single month, more than 100,000 cars that can achieve thirty miles per gallon in highway driving, the automaker said on Monday, April 2. About forty percent of GM's March sales were of these fuel-efficient cars, said Mark Reuss, GM President for North America.

Analysts say that GM has come a long way since President Barack Obama was quoted as saying about American automakers in November 2008 - in a 2010 book by Steven Rattner, former Head of Obama's auto task force - "Why can't they make a Corolla?"

"GM has made a complete turnaround where fuel-efficiency is now a priority compared to just a few years ago," said Jesse Toprak, an analyst at TrueCar.com. "As consumers have started to request more fuel-efficient cars, manufacturers have done a really good job to meet their demands."

GM's Reuss said that in recent years, the automaker has invested in four-cylinder and turbocharged engines, more fuel-efficient transmissions, and hybrid and plug-in electric cars. "Three years ago, about sixteen percent of the vehicles GM sold achieved at least thirty mpg on the highway," Reuss said in a statement on Monday. "Today, that number is forty percent."

Auto consultant and analyst TrueCar.com compiled its own estimates of automakers' U.S. sales and the percentage derived from models that attain at least 30 mpg in either highway or city driving. The estimates show that U.S. automakers have improved greatly on fuel economy since 2008, and that manufacturers are better-prepared for the current spike in gasoline prices than they were in July 2008 when gasoline reached a record high average U.S. price of $4.11 a gallon.

In March, according to TrueCar.com, forty three percent of GM's U.S. sales derived from vehicles that achieve at least thirty mpg. That compares with only sixteen percent of GM's monthly sales four years ago, TrueCar.com said. Ford's thirty-mpg models accounted for thirty-six percent of its March sales, up from eleven percent in 2008, and sixteen percent of Chrysler's U.S. sales in March were expected to come from fuel-efficient vehicles, compared with zero four years ago.

The leader on that list was Korea's Hyundai at eighty three percent in March, up from sixty percent in 2008.

March sales of the Chevy Volt, the plug-in electric hybrid that is a "halo car" for GM, will be the highest for any month since its December 2010 launch, a GM spokesman said on Monday. "Halo car" is industry jargon for a unique automobile intended to draw attention to an overall brand. The heavy sales month for Volt comes amid a work stoppage after the Volt's sales were disappointing through February. GM did not offer specific sales figures for the Volt, but said they would top December 2011 when sales were 1,529 vehicles.

GM has halted Volt and Opel Ampera production at its plant in Detroit and the neighboring city of Hamtramck, MI, for five weeks, until April 23. The Opel Ampera, which is basically the same car as the Volt, is sold in Europe. The company continues to work to adjust Volt production with market demand, the spokesman said.

The federal government estimates that Volt can achieve a gasoline efficiency equivalent of 93 mpg.

The Volt's sales of 8,000 in 2011 are paltry compared with sales of GM's gasoline-efficient models.

GM's answer to Obama's Corolla question is the Chevrolet Cruze, which recorded sales of 231,732 vehicles in 2011, second in the small sedan category only to Toyota Motor Corp's vaunted Corolla, with 240,259 in sales, according to Autodata Corp.

On Sunday, April 1, NHTSA opened an investigation into reports of two cases in which 2011 Cruze models had engine fires.

For February, the last full month of official new auto sales posted, among small cars only, Toyota had the best average fuel economy in the U.S. market at 35.3 mpg, followed by Honda at 32.3 mpg, Ford at 32.2 mpg, Hyundai at 31.3 mpg, Nissan Motor Co. at 30.8 mpg, and GM at 30.3 mpg, TrueCar found.

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