It may have been seven-up, but itcertainly wasn’t thirsty! Chevrolet’s Captiva cruised itsway through the fifth AA/ALD Automotive MPG Marathon with a full crew of sevenfully grown adults aboard, proving that an SUV can be an environmentallyresponsible way to travel.
Driven by respected motoring journalist MattJoy (29), with a crew of six other fully grown adults, the £21,140 CaptivaLT returned an impressive 42.42mpg – an increase of 5.32mpg or 14.35 percent over the official combined figure of 37.2mpg.
Run over a gruelling 334-mile route across Hampshire, Somerset and Devon, the MPG Marathon incorporates a mixture of motorway, town and cross country driving to replicate typically challenging British driving conditions. And with seven adults aboard, the 2.0-litre diesel Captiva’s impressive performance meant a CO2 output of just 15.1 kg per person over the entire route. With the average car on the UK’s roads emitting 164g/km of CO2 a single person driving on their own over the same route would generate a CO2 output of 88 kg – almost six times as much.
What’s more, despite travelling in the Captiva for two full days, the crew of seven adults arrived at the MPG Marathon’s finish point – the AA’sheadquarters in Basingstoke, Hants, in fine fettle.
“I’d doit again tomorrow!” said passenger Richard Sowter (23), “But nexttime, I’d take my iPod!”