Sentences with phrase «means fuel savings»

Less seat means lighter weight loads, and that means fuel savings for airlines.

Not exact matches

Behind Germany and ahead of some of the oil producers, it runs the largest current account surplus in the world, which means that it is exporting its excess savings in a world that has nowhere to put the money, and so the world must respond either with speculative asset bubbles, unproductive investment, debt - fueled consumption binges or unemployment.
The fact that the high - efficiency furnace generates more heat for a given amount of fuel burnt doesn't necessarily mean I will end up with any fuel savings.
This means that despite a higher level of engine and driving performance, all four models consume significantly less fuel than the previous models; total savings for individual versions are as much as 16 per cent.
To sweeten the deal, the whole thing runs off regular 87 octane fuel, which means you aren't spending those hybrid fuel savings on the premium stuff.
Taking a slightly different angle, Werner added: «While the fuel savings afforded by our BMW EfficientDynamics technologies means the changes only apply to select vehicles within our model range, we are committed to acting in the best interests of our customers.»
For many, buying a new car means significant fuel savings down the road.
However, this new system, which Audi claims shows «no discernible differences to permanent systems with respect to traction and driving dynamics,» is meant as a fuel savings measure, and Audi claims it saves 0.3 liters for every 100 kM when tested in Ingolstadt traffic.
That means at today's fuel prices Ram EcoDiesel owners are not able to offset the additional cost of their EcoDiesel engines with fuel savings
EV owners can save money on fueling costs without changing electricity plans, but taking advantage of rate plans that offer lower - cost electricity at night («time - of - use» plans) can mean hundreds of dollars in additional savings per year, especially in California.
• Kyoto Protocol • EU ETS • Australian CO2 tax and ETS • Mandating and heavily subsidising ($ / TWh delivered) renewable energy • Masses of inappropriate regulations that have inhibited the development of nuclear power, made it perhaps five times more expensive now than it should be, slowed its development, slowed its roll out, caused global CO2 emissions to be 10 % to 20 % higher now than they would otherwise have been, meaning we are on a much slower trajectory to reduce emissions than we would be and, most importantly, we are locked in to fossil fuel electricity generation that causes 10 to 100 times more fatalities per TWh than would be the case if we allowed nuclear to develop (or perhaps 1000 times according to this: http://nextbigfuture.com/2011/03/deaths-per-twh-by-energy-source.html • Making building regulations that effectively prevent people from selling, refurbishing or updating their houses if they are close to sea level (the damage to property values and to property owners» life savings is enormous as many examples in Australia are already demonstrating.
Murray said, «this car will come with a bunch of incentives on things like tax and parking that mean that within four years you'll pay off the purchase cost with the savings; it's not just fuel.
That could mean a big fuel savings for tight budgets.
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