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Report: By 2017, Fewer Than Half Of U.S. Cars Will Run On Conventional Gasoline Engines

If we've learned anything from the rosy, sci-fi predictions that emerged from the Space Race of the mid-20th-century, it's that human beings can be very optimistic when thinking about their future. Decades after The Jetsons forecast flying cars and 2001: A Space Odyssey promised interplanetary travel for the everyman, we've awoken to the sobering lesson that radical change takes time.

That said, today's auto industry is morphing quickly, and some predict that within two years, the U.S. car market will have undergone a dramatic shift. 

READ: As More States Get Legal Pot, Americans Hazy On Drugged Driving

According to Gas 2, those predictions come via Navigant Research, which has analyzed recent sales trends to issue forecasts for the coming decade:

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This Navigant Research report analyzes the emerging global market for technologies that improve fuel economy. The study examines the consumer demand and regulatory background related to features and lightweight materials for increasing fuel efficiency in vehicles. Global market forecasts for [light duty vehicle] sales, segmented by powertrain, region, and number of cylinders, extend through 2025. Additional forecasts by region are provided for the volumes and associated revenue of key fuel efficient systems and materials. The report also examines the approach of the leading vehicle manufacturers, suppliers, and industry players and evaluates how the market for lighter and more efficient vehicle technologies will evolve.

Among Navigant's most intriguing predictions is that by 2017 -- just two years from now -- fewer than half of all U.S. automobiles will make use of simple, conventional gasoline engines.

That doesn't mean that America's roads will be suddenly clogged with hybrids and electric cars -- though Navigant predicts that sales of such vehicles will increase. Instead, it means that automakers will explore a range of technologies to improve their fleet-wide fuel economy. Doing so will help them meet new federal standards and also meet customer demand for fuel-efficient cars that can weather inconsistencies in the global oil market.

For the coming decade, though, Navigant doesn't see one technology taking a significant lead: there's going to be a lot of trial, error, and incremental improvement. Automakers will sell a range of vehicles employing superchargers, turbochargers, hybrid systems, electric systems, and more. 

So, for efficiency fans envisioning a shortcut to cleaner cars, we say: ask your robot butler to tell you when they've arrived.

You can order the complete report from Navigant Research here.

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