I received this release today and it details some of the reasons
40MPG.ORG: GM, FORD JUNK BONDS SHOULD BE CALLED “YAEGASHI BONDS” TO RECOGNIZE LAGGING
Why New Debt From Ford, GM Should Be Named for a Japanese Engineer;
Poll: 63% of Americans Already Worry About U.S/Japanese “Hybrid Tech Gap.”
WASHINGTON, D.C.///May 9, 2005///Now that the Standard & Poor’s rating agency has downgraded the General Motors Corporation and Ford Motor Co. to junk bond status, Wall Street should take the next logical step and refer to any such new debt issued by the struggling U.S. automakers as “Yaegashi bonds,” according to 40mpg.org, a Web-based campaign organized by the Results for America arm of the nonprofit Civil Society Institute (CSI) to promote higher fuel-efficiency standards for U.S. vehicles.
Why “Yaegashi bonds”? The little-known Takehisa Yaegashi is the
Civil Society Institute President Pam Solo said: “The reason that Japan has at least a six-year lead today on red-hot hybrid auto technology is because people like Yaegashi saw the handwriting on the wall more than 30 years ago and set out to do something about it. Japanese automakers built their pickups and SUVs just like
Solo added: “
According to a 40mpg.org national opinion survey released on March 17, 2005, more than three out of five Americans (63 percent) think the "hybrid technology gap" - in which U.S. automakers will fall further behind Japanese and other foreign automakers that have more fully embraced the new fuel-efficient technology – is a serious or somewhat of a problem. The extent of this concern among Americans is essentially bipartisan, including conservatives (60 percent), moderates (70 percent) and liberals (69 percent). Similarly, the concern about the hybrid technology gap is shared by 58 percent of NASCAR fans and 65 percent of car/truck/new technology enthusiasts.
The April 2004 MIT Technology Review article telling the story of Yaegashi reads in part as follows: “The Hirose plant is off-limits to journalists, but the story of
In 1971, Yaegashi was a 28-year-old mechanical engineer, two years out of
The entire text of the Review article is available online at http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/04/04/fairley0404.asp?p=1.
ABOUT WWW.40MPG.ORG
The 40mpg.org campaign and Results For America/Civil Society Institute have no direct or indirect ties to any automakers in the
Launched on March 17, 2004, the new http://www.40mpg.org Web site features a calculator that allows visitors to plug in estimates for their current vehicle's fuel efficiency level, a typical price paid for gasoline in recent weeks, and total number of miles driven per year. For example, a driver who gets 17 miles to the gallon, pays $2 a gallon for gasoline and drives 25,000 miles per year, could achieve the following each year by switching to a 40 mpg vehicle: save $1,691.18 at the gas pump; require 845 fewer gallons of gasoline from Middle East oil; and cut personal air pollution by 16,912 pounds of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.
The 40mpg.org Web site also permits visitors to: join a community of other people who own their vehicle make/model; compare and contrast one vehicle's fuel-efficiency ratings with those of others; monitor how individual members of Congress weighed in on the most recent fuel-efficiency standard votes; contact automakers to speak out in favor of more fuel-efficient vehicles; and send a letter to the editor of a local newspaper urging the adoption of a 40 mpg fuel-efficiency standard. Visitors who sign up at the 40mpg.org Web site will be contacted in the future to urge lawmakers and automakers to take action.
Results For America is a project of the Civil Society Institute, which is based in
CONTACT: Ailis Aaron, (703) 276-3265 or aaaron@hastingsgroup.com.
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