good 

New Zealand’s guide to sustainable living

Subscribe

Article illustration

Drive like a Dutchman

Home » Magazine » Good, issue 5 » Drive like a Dutchman

Take driving tips from your nanna to save money on fuel, and you might even win a rally. Vincent Heeringa proves the the tortoise really can beat the hare

The Dutch are notorious scrooges. My father tells a story of an uncle who once went into a petrol station and asked how much it cost for a drop of gas. “Aw, nothing, I guess,” said the attendant.

“Okay then, fill it up with drips!”

I figured my heritage would give me a head start in the AA Energywise Rally, a 1,626-kilometre ‘race’ to find the most fuel-efficient vehicles in the land. I was invited to drive a BMW 320 diesel, with a factory efficiency target of 5.9 litres per 100 kilometres. Pfiff, I thought. I can get more mileage out of a banana cake.

The rally participants are deadly serious. My suggestion—“Can we let their tyres down overnight?”— is met with blank stares.

The 60 participants represent the best and brightest of auto technology and the results are keenly sought after, because the stakes are increasingly high. Climate change, high petrol prices and a recession are the perfect storm for a nation that spends more on powering its cars ($67 per week) than its homes ($32).

And here are some more facts:

  • The transport sector is responsible for 45 percent of our energy-related greenhouse gas emissions.
  • The average car in New Zealand emits 3.28 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent a year.
  • If every New Zealand motorist used 10 percent less fuel through efficient driving practices, it would be like taking over 250,000 vehicles off the road.

That last statistic stays with me as we inch our way, grandma-like, into the Auckland traffic one cold Monday in November. The key to fuel-efficient driving, it seems, lies in the acceleration. Or to be more precise, the lack of it. That and anticipation. In gridlocked city traffic, the constant starting and stopping eats up efficiency. After just five kilometres we are doing a horrendous 8.3 litres per 100 kilometres.

Mind you, that’s better than my own Chrysler family wagon. Even on a downhill open road it clocks in at something like 100 litres for half a kilometre. I forget the exact numbers.

Most of the cars in New Zealand are more than 12 years old, with an efficiency of 10.2 litres per 100 kilometres, so the AA Energywise Rally is important not just for testing the actual autos (see table, page 70) but also for the awareness it raises about ‘hypermiling’: the act of driving below the standardised fuel-efficiency targets.

Fans of TV programme Top Gear will understand the importance of how you drive, from the episode in which Jeremy Clarkson hounds a Toyota Prius around the race track in a BMW M3—and scores better fuel efficiency. The test is bollocks, given that your average trip to school or work is not a race. As Rod Oram wrote in issue three of Good (good.net.nz/topgear), in real-world conditions it still matters what you drive.

But hypermiling does actually work. By the time we reach the open road, our efficiency is rising fast. We’re averaging 4.5 litres per 100 kilometres, an impressive 25 percent better than the target. At one stage we get down to an even more impressive 4.3, and finish the rally on 4.77 (second in our class for fuel use!).

The winning driver, in a beasty Holden ute, is almost 45 percent below target. EECA says that for the average car, a 20 percent reduction off the rated figure creates a saving of nearly $400 a year at current petrol prices (assuming petrol is $1.50 per litre, your car gets 10.2 litres per 100 kilometres, and you travel 12,600 kilometres a year).

If nothing else, the rally proves that your grandmother was right about one thing: driving like Jeremy Clarkson makes you stupid.

Add your comment

Anonymous comments are queued before publishing and it may take some time before they appear. Please consider creating an account and your comment will appear automatically. If you already have an account, please log in.








If you have trouble reading the code, click on the code itself to generate a new random code
 

More Goodness

The Good blog
  • Walking the talk
    article illustration

    Oxfam Trailwalker is the most life-changing, team-building, foot-slogging, friendship-forming, group-hugging experience ever ... oh, and it's just won New Zealand's top sustainability event award for third straight year.

  • Have your say on NZ's energy future
    article illustration

    Greenpeace and the WWF are calling for urgent submissions on the Government's proposed draft energy strategy. Submissions close at 5pm on Thursday 2 September (this week!).

  • At the forge
    article illustration

    Here on the coast when the weather’s a bit gloomy, the pubs aren’t really happening and the blacksmithing fix hasn’t quite left for the day, then there’s always the ‘home forge’

Good magazine
  • Community projects

    List of your community projects in New Zealand

  • Bring home the bacon
    article illustration

    Five months pregnant and facing her 40th birthday, Francesca Price decides it’s time to go pig hunting

  • Aspartame

    Should you worry about aspartame?

article illustration

Latest issue

What does it really take to hop off the treadmill? We ask five families who've changed their lives, and find seven ways to slow down and simplify your life (without too many sacrifices!). Plus: Your eco home makeover—part one of our new renovation series.

Follow us

Latest comments

  • FC on The Italian stallion:
    Thanks for the recipes, Alessandra. Broccoli is probably my favourite vegetable that I usually just steam or stir fry but I'm now inspired t  
  • Annabel McAleer on 7 questions about the BP oil spill:
    Thank god that's over. Here's some info on the clean-up and dispersal of the oil, from the Science Media Centre:The Deepwater Horizon oil sp  
  • pioverten on Have your say on NZ's energy future:
    I only had time for a quick read.there is very little in there about education or upskilling.In my experience as an engineer, the public's u  
  • Inger Perkins on Fair ground attraction:
    If you want to switch your work place tea room supplies to fair trade, don't worry about the cost.  When I saw in a Good magazine last  
  • Inger Perkins on Have your say on NZ's energy future:
    If the Draft Energy Strategy flew under your radar until hours before submissions closed, how many more radars will it have avoided?  C  
  • Julia on This one's for the ladies:
    GO MENSTRUAL CUPS...they are the best thing ever! They mean: no more embarrassing visits to the supermarket (where you inevitably end up spe  
  • Penny Vergeest on Cosmetic deceptions:
    Great article in Consumer - this is something that I have been passionate about for a long time -it is so important for customers to be educ  
  • natural organic skincare cosmetics on Cosmetic deceptions:
    Wow!! You're one of the
    first organic makeup artist blogs I've seen.. But I think that's great! Especailly
    since you're brown like ME! :)  

Blogs

Good pages

Good Shopping Handbook
carboNZero logo

Good magazine is a carboNZero certified product