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May 22, 2007 3:21 PM PDT

New York taxi fleet to go all-hybrid

by Jonathan Skillings
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New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg dropped by the Today show Tuesday morning to talk about cleaning up his city. No, it wasn't time for a get-tough-on-crime talk. Instead, he wants to make the urban air a little less noxious, and maybe give the fight against global warming a little more street-level cred.

Yahoo-labeled hybrid taxicab

The old and new look of cabs in Manhattan's Times Square. (Credit: PRNewsFoto/Yahoo)

Hizzoner used the morning news-and-lighter-fare show to say that by 2012, all of the city's taxis would be hybrid vehicles. "There's an awful lot of taxicabs on the streets of New York City, obviously"--13,000 licensed yellow cabs, 90 percent of them Crown Victorias, according to the account in The New York Times--"so it makes a real big difference. These cars just sit there in traffic sometimes, belching fumes." (Just sometimes?)

"This"--he points to the Ford Escape hybrid that served as the backdrop for the Today segment--"does a lot less. It's a lot better for all of us."

The Escape was provided by Yahoo, which is donating 10 hybrids altogether. Along with the decals touting the Web portal and its green initiatives, the small SUV also sported energy-stingy compact fluorescent bulbs in the advertising light box on the roof.

New York is also working to get newer, cleaner technology into its fleet of buses--and maybe even garbage trucks someday. "Some things they just don't make yet, but we're trying to go in that direction," Bloomberg said on Today. There's also the matter of getting the taxi industry on board with Tuesday's announcement, but as the licensing and regulatory authority, the city certainly has its share of leverage.

So while there's no guarantee that your next ride will be any less hair-raising, pretty soon hailing a cab in midtown Manhattan could at least be a lot more eco-friendly.

Jonathan Skillings is managing editor of CNET News, based in the Boston bureau. He's been with CNET since 2000, after a decade in tech journalism at the IDG News Service, PC Week, and an AS/400 magazine. He's also been a soldier and a schoolteacher. E-mail Jon.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register)
why not go green literally
by 9henri9 May 22, 2007 6:13 PM PDT
I feel a decision to go hybrid for all new york taxis would be a tremendous
incentive for a national follow through. So why not change the color of the
yellow cab to solid green. Selecting a bright, electric, chinese green would
make the new cabs extremely distinctive and a visual sign saying, here I am,
take me. A really cool way of saying, the future is here.
Reply to this comment
why not go green literally
by 9henri9 May 22, 2007 6:13 PM PDT
I feel a decision to go hybrid for all new york taxis would be a tremendous
incentive for a national follow through. So why not change the color of the
yellow cab to solid green. Selecting a bright, electric, chinese green would
make the new cabs extremely distinctive and a visual sign saying, here I am,
take me. A really cool way of saying, the future is here.
Reply to this comment
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