GM cancels Malibu, Saturn hybrids, works on new system


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Chevrolet Malibu hybrid at the 2009 Cleveland Auto Show

DETROIT (AP) — General Motors Corp. will stop making Chevrolet Malibus and Saturn Auras with an early generation gas-electric hybrid engine system, but engineers are working on a more-efficient version of the system, a company spokesman said Thursday.

“Mild” hybrid versions of the midsize cars aren’t selling well because they cost about $4,000 more than base models but only get four more miles per gallon of gasoline.

And models equipped with a four-cylinder engine and six-speed automatic transmission, which cost about $900 less than the hybrid, get only one mile less per gallon on the highway and four miles less in the city.

“We’ve seen a lot of people go for the four-cylinder six-speed,” GM spokesman Terry Rhadigan said. “That may have had an impact on why they’re [hybrids] plentiful in the marketplace.”

Rhadigan says the new version will debut with new models in the summer of 2010. He would not identify which vehicles will get the new system.

Currently the GM mild hybrid system, which came to market in 2006, cuts off the engine when the car stops and uses an electric motor to help the gasoline engine get the car going again. Rhadigan would not give details of the new system.

GM sold 706 Malibu hybrids and 35 Aura hybrids in May, compared with a total of 14,098 Malibus and 2,235 Auras for the month, according to Autodata Corp..