I am reticent to call this 'news' because this is a recurring Consumer Reports survey result: Survey Finds Consumers Want Better Gas Mileage, Stricter MPG Standards - Consumer Reports Even with gas prices hitting a slump in the middle of summer driving season, nearly 90 percent of respondents in a new Consumer Reports poll say that automakers should continue to improve fuel economy for all vehicles, and they overwhelmingly support stricter government-mandated mileage requirements. . . . In the survey, 35 percent of respondents placed fuel economy as the aspect of their car that has the most room for improvement. More respondents chose that rather than purchase price (26 percent) and passenger room (14 percent). When the Consumer Reports 'score' includes mileage with an observable standing, I'll stop calling 'humbug.' The last time I checked, their score was tied to creature comforts of the driver and cabin with nothing touching MPG. Of course we dropped our Consumer Reports subscription so we didn't participate in this survey. It isn't as if Consumer Reports can't figure it out for FUEL-EFFICIENT HATCHBACKS Overall mpg = 38 or higher: Best & Worst Fuel Economy for Cars, SUVs, and Trucks Rank Make & Model Overall mpg City mpg Highway mpg 1 1 BMW i3 Giga 139* 135* 141* 2 2 Toyota Prius Prime 133* / 50** 38** 62** 3 3 Mitsubishi i-MiEV SE 111* 104* 116* 4 4 Ford Focus Electric 107* 108* 107* 5 5 Nissan Leaf SL 106 * 86 * 118 * 6 6 Chevrolet Volt LT 105* 99* 109* 7 7 Ford C-Max Energi 94* / 37** 87* / 36** 98* / 38** 8 8 Toyota Prius Three 52 43 59 9 9 Toyota Prius C Two 43 37 48 10 10 Lexus CT 200h Premium 40 31 47 * - MPGe ** - MPG I am not a fan of Consumer Reports 'City MPG' metrics. Bob Wilson
these numbers are highly suspect of being fake (prius hwy MPG higher than city?, yeah, right!) or manipulated to show bias (gas MPG for prime, yet MPGe for volt). i dropped CR subscription almost 2 decades before when i noticed things they highly recommended based on their "scientific" testing were piles of garbage.
I started questioning them after a grade school level comparison of dog foods. A recipe of sawdust, urea, and motor oil would have topped their list.