What is the Difference Between Energy-Efficient Vehicles and New Energy Vehicles?
1 Answers
Energy-efficient vehicles and new energy vehicles differ in their definitions: Energy-efficient vehicles refer to those with internal combustion engines as the primary power system, achieving fuel consumption that surpasses the target value for the next phase of vehicles under comprehensive operating conditions; new energy vehicles refer to those that utilize unconventional automotive fuels as power sources (or use conventional automotive fuels with the introduction of new automotive power devices), integrating advanced automotive power control and drive technologies to form advanced technical principles, resulting in vehicles with new technologies and structures. Relevant information about energy-efficient vehicles and new energy vehicles is as follows: 1. Energy-efficient vehicles refer to low-energy-consumption, low-pollution, small-displacement, new-energy, and new-power vehicles. 2. New energy vehicles include four major types: hybrid electric vehicles (HEV), pure electric vehicles (BEV, including solar-powered vehicles), fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEV), and other new energy (such as supercapacitors, flywheels, and other high-efficiency energy storage devices) vehicles.