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Ford Motor Co CEO Alan Mulally expects the company to sell plug-in hybrids in five to 10 years.
"Within five to 10 years we will start to see this technology in our hands," Mulally said on Monday at a press event to announce an alliance between Ford and utility Southern California Edison to test 20 rechargeable electric vehicles.
Asked if that meant plug-in hybrids would be available on showroom floors, Mulally said: "Yes. Sure."
The rollout of Ford plug-in hybrids was dependent on advancements to lithium-ion batteries that would be charged by the car's owners using regular household electrical outlets.
Mulally declined to give a more precise production target, saying: "I can't go further than that. We will know a lot more in the next few years."
The comments were the first time Ford has offered a timeline for producing plug-in hybrids.
The alliance between the number 2 US carmaker and the second-biggest US electric utility is a first of its kind.
Many environmental advocates see plug-in hybrid vehicles as the best available technology to reduce petrol consumption and global-warming greenhouse gas emissions.
The Ford CEO and John Bryson, chief executive of Southern California Edison parent Edison International, unveiled plans for the alliance at Edison International's headquarters in suburban Los Angeles.
Under the partnership, researchers from Southern California Edison and Ford would work together in "real world" testing of up to 20 plug-in hybrid vehicles, Bryson said.
Environmental advocates who have criticised Ford in the past, welcomed the tie-up and said it showed the carmaker was back in the race for electric car technology with Toyota and General Motors.
Mulally said Ford would provide Edison with 20 Escape Hybrid SUVs reconfigured to work as plug-ins by 2009. The first would be delivered by the end of this year.
Ford will work with an as-yet unnamed battery company to make the plug-ins for the tests.
Bryson said Edison would make it a "real world" test by giving the Escapes to 20 consumers who had electric "smart meters" to monitor power used to charge the SUVs.
Mulally cautioned that the commercial rollout of the still experimental vehicles depended on advances in battery technology, an assessment shared by other rival carmakers.
Ford, which lost $12.6 billion last year, became the first US carmaker to introduce a petrol-electric hybrid - the Escape - in 2004.
Faced with declining US market share, Ford later backed off ambitious sales targets for hybrids and was criticised by environmental advocates for having lost momentum in the race to develop alternatives to combustion engines.
Environmental advocates, particularly in California, have been pressing carmakers to roll out plug-in vehicles capable of running solely on electricity for short distances and recharging at a standard electric outlet.
"Consumers have been waiting a long time for an automaker to offer the next generation of ultra-fuel-efficient, petrol-optional cars," said environmental groups Rainforest Action Network and Global Exchange Campaign in response to Ford's announcement.
Ford will initially work exclusively with Southern California Electric to develop the testing procedures, but did not rule out working with other partners in the future. And Bryson said Edison would work with other carmakers.
The two companies came together because of the relationship of the two chief executives, who are both linked to Boeing Corp.
Mulally was Boeing's executive vice president before joining Ford in September 2006 and Bryson is a director of Boeing.
GM began development work this year on its own plug-in hybrid car and has set 2010 as a target for production.
Plug-in hybrids are to use little or no petrol over short distances and at lower speeds.
- Reuters