Published: 4:28PM Saturday February 23, 2008
Source: Reuters
General Motors Corp Vice Chairman Bob Lutz has defended remarks
he made dismissing global warming as a "total crock of shit,"
saying his views had no bearing on GM's commitment to build
environmentally friendly vehicles.
Lutz, GM's outspoken product development chief, has been under fire
from internet bloggers since last month when he was quoted as
making the remark to reporters in Texas.
In a posting on his GM blog on Thursday, Lutz said those "spewing
virtual vitriol" at him for minimizing the threat of climate change
were "missing the big picture."
"What they should be doing in earnest is forming opinions, not
about me but about GM and what this company is doing that
is...hugely beneficial to the causes they so enthusiastically claim
to support," he said in a posting titled, "Talk About a
Crock."
GM, the largest US automaker by sales and market share, has been
trying to change its image after taking years of heat for relying
too much on sales of large sport-utility vehicles like the Hummer
and not moving faster on fuel-saving hybrid technology.
"My thoughts on what has or hasn't been the cause of climate change
have nothing to do with the decisions I make to advance the cause
of General Motors," he wrote.
Lutz said GM was continuing development of the battery-powered,
plug-in Chevy Volt and other alternatives to traditional internal
combustion engines.
GM is racing against Toyota Motor Corp to be first to market a
plug-in hybrid car that can be recharged at a standard electric
outlet.
Lutz has previously said GM made a mistake by allowing Toyota to
seize "the mantle of green respectability and technology
leadership" with its market-leading Prius hybrid.
A 40-year auto industry veteran who joined GM earlier in the decade
with a mandate to shake up its vehicle line-up, Lutz is no stranger
to controversy.
As part of a campaign against higher fuel economy standards, Lutz
wrote in a 2006 blog posting that forcing automakers to sell
smaller cars would be "like trying to address the obesity problem
in this country by forcing clothing manufacturers to sell smaller,
tighter sizes."
Automakers ended their opposition to higher fuel standards in 2007
when it became clear that proposed changes would become law with or
without their support.
In December, US President George Bush signed a law mandating a 40%
increase in fleetwide fuel economy by 2020, the first substantial
change in three decades.
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