Philips Electronics aims to expand sales of environment-friendly products.

February 12th, 2008

AMSTERDAM: Philips Electronics said Tuesday that it planned to spend \1 billion, or $1.4 billion, over the next five years to increase sales of environment-friendly products.

Gerard Kleisterlee, the chief executive, said Philips aimed to double the share of its revenue from environmentally friendly products to 30 percent by 2012. Separately, the company plans to increase energy efficiency of its operations by 25 percent in the same period.

As awareness of climate change grows, going green will give a company a competitive edge, Kleisterlee said in an interview. “Certainly in the current debate in society and the increased consciousness about the environment, energy efficiency will be an aspect in purchasing decisions, both on professional customers and consumers,” he said.

The Philips strategy is part of a global trend, as climate change takes higher priority in corporate planning. A report issued Monday in New York by the Carbon Disclosure Project said global leaders in retailing and manufacturing were paying more attention to greenhouse gas emissions linked to products they made and sold.

“The big thing this year is the huge increase in the level of seriousness with which climate change is being incorporated into the corporate strategy of companies,” Paul Dickinson, head of the Carbon Disclosure Project, said.

Philips, the worlds largest lighting maker and one of Europes largest medical equipment and electronics manufacturers, has placed its environmental record and ambitions at the center of its marketing, especially in its promotion of low-energy light bulbs.

Two weeks ago, Kleisterlee announced that Philips would step up the pace of acquisitions. On Tuesday, he said eco-friendliness would be a factor in seeking acquisitions.

Toyota says hybrids’ margins should equal gasoline cars’ by 2010

February 12th, 2008

TOYOTA CITY, Japan: By 2010, Toyota Motor expects to have cut costs for hybrid cars enough to be able to make as much money on them as it does on conventional gasoline cars, a top executive said on Thursday.

Japans top automaker has been anxious to see the fuel-saving powertrain enter the mainstream since launching the Prius, the worlds first hybrid car, in 1997. But sales have come at the expense of profitability, given its high production costs.

But Masatami Takimoto, executive vice president in charge of powertrain development, said cost-cutting efforts on the systems motor, battery and inverter were bearing fruit, and that the cost structure would improve drastically by the time Toyota reached its sales goal of a million hybrids annually in 2010 or soon after.

“By then, we expect margins to be equal to gasoline cars,” he said in an interview at Toyotas headquarters.

If it succeeds, Toyota, which is on its way to becoming the worlds biggest carmaker, will be removing the main hurdle to cost-competitiveness for the hybrid: the expense of the powertrain, which pairs a conventional engine with an electric motor. It will also likely widen its sales lead as more consumers seek better mileage as fuel costs rise.

Data this week showed U.S. gasoline prices at an all-time high - above $3 a gallon, or 80 cents a liter - and Takimoto said he expected energy prices to continue rising.

Toyota probably achieved cumulative hybrid sales of a million units this month, having moved 998,900 by the end of April. By 2020, Takimoto said he expected hybrids to become the standard drivetrain and account for “100 percent” of Toyotas vehicles.

In 2006, it sold 313,000 units, accounting for the majority of the worlds hybrid cars, and aims to lift that to 430,000 units this year with ramped-up production of the popular Prius.

Toyota struggled for years to keep up with demand for the second-generation Prius. But sales began to suffer late last year after U.S. tax credits whittled down for the model, prompting Toyota to offer incentives of up to $2,000.

Takimoto said he saw little impact on profitability before and after the incentives appeared, mainly thanks to larger volume - Prius production will rise by 40 percent to 280,000 units this year - and the ongoing efforts to shave costs.

European auto majors like DaimlerChrysler and Volkswagen, meanwhile, have poured much of their energy into clean-diesel engines to challenge hybrids.

Qwest 4Q Profit Rises 89 Percent

February 12th, 2008

(02-12) 04:36 PST DENVER (AP) —

Qwest Communications International Inc. says its fourth-quarter earnings rose 89 percent as operating costs fell.

The Denver telecommunications provider said Tuesday net income rose to $366 million from $194 million a year earlier. That amounts to 20 cents per share, up from 10 cents per share in 2006 and is better than the 14 cents per share expected by analysts surveyed in a Thomson Financial poll.

Qwest’s revenue slid 1.5 percent to $3.4 billion, but operating costs dropped 6 percent.

Chief Financial Officer John Richardson says the results reflect “financial discipline.”

Qwest has also declared a dividend of 8 cents. That is the company’s first payout since 2001.