gas prices

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If you’re in the market for a car this summer, and if that market includes a Hyundai, you could get more than just a car — you could get a time machine. The Korean car maker began its Hyundai Assurance Gas Lock (catchy!) on July 1. The program guarantees a year’s worth of gas at $1.49 a gallon — a price that hasn’t been seen in the U.S. for more than five years, according to AutoWeek.

You may recall that GM tried a similar incentive during last summer’s record gas prices, offering three years’ worth of gas at $2.99 a gallon. The bottom fell out of that plan, though, when gas prices dropped off. As of July 7, AAA pegged the national average price for a gallon of gas at $2.77. The highest record price came almost exactly a year ago, when the average price of gas hit $4.11 on July 17, 2008.

Hyundai’s Gas Lock plan applies to cars purchased between July 1 and August 31, 2009. The only cars in the company’s lineup that don’t qualify are the base model of the Accent and the car-mag faves Genesis and Genesis coupe models.

Image of the Hyundai Accent courtesy of Hyundai Motor America.

Oh, Americans, when will we ever learn? We the people freaked out during the spring and summer of 2008, when gas prices hit $4 a gallon, and bought small, low-gas-mileage, low-emissions, Earth-friendlier vehicles by the boatload. Small cars that had languished on dealership lots for months were snapped up in seconds as the price of gasoline climbed. And heaven forbid you had a Mini Cooper or hybrid on your shopping list. They were scarcer than hens’ teeth.

In the wake of this fuel economy frenzy, articles were written (including one by me) about the plight of the large truck. Pickups and SUVs were left on the lot by new-car buyers, despite deep discounts and dealer incentives to get these things to go away and make room for the smaller cars people wanted.

But now, though we all talk a good eco-game, truck sales are inching back up. This despite the fact that all signs point to the current low-ish price of gas being an anomaly. Not to mention that whole reducing the ol’ carbon footprint idea. Here are the top five vehicles ranked by sales in May and November, according to industry publication Automotive News, with city and highway mileage plus the annual carbon dioxide output numbers from the EPA:

May 2008

  1. Honda Civic (53,299 sold, 25/36, 6.3 tons of CO2)
  2. Toyota Corolla (52,826, 26/35, 7.3 tons of CO2)
  3. Toyota Camry (51,291, 21/31, 7.3 tons of CO2)
  4. Honda Accord (43,728, 21/31, 7.7 tons of CO2)
  5. Ford F series (42,973, 14/19, 11.4 tons of CO2)

November 2008

  1. Ford F series (37,911)
  2. Chevy Silverado (29,534, 15 city/20 hwy, 10.8 tons of CO2)
  3. Toyota Camry (25,224)
  4. Toyota Corolla (21,807)
  5. Honda Civic (17,690)