From BusinessWeek.com:
 
Consumers who order or purchase a new  2010 hybrid vehicle from Ford Motor Co. by the end of March are eligible  for a tax credit, the company said Wednesday.
Purchases or orders of new Ford Fusion  and Mercury Milan hybrids made by March 31 will qualify for a $3,400  credit on their 2009 tax returns.
The company unveiled its hybrid version  of the Ford Fusion last November that can go up to 47 miles per hour  on battery power alone. The Fusion gets 41 miles per gallon in the city  and 36 mpg on the highway.
The Ford Escape and Mercury Mariner hybrids  are still eligible for a $3,000 tax credit. The credits vary due to  the performance of the vehicle. The Escape and Mariner get 34 mpg in  the city, and 31 mpg on highways.
Ford said its Fusion hybrid would be  in showrooms by March 31, but did not offer pricing details. Consumers  have shied away from the electric-gas combo cars as gas prices have  fallen rapidly since last summer, as the cost savings deteriorated.
 
According to the auto Web site Edmunds.com,  hybrid sales plunged 43 percent in December and 50 percent in November,  surpassing the industry's overall sales decline of 36 percent in December  and 37 percent the month before.
Fusion and Milan hybrids purchased between  April 1 and Sept. 31 are eligible for a $1,700 credit. The tax credit  drops to $850 for purchases between Oct. 1 and March 31, 2010. The credit  drops over time because Ford has more than 60,000 hybrid vehicles on  the road, and tax regulations state that the credit must be phased out  after that threshold is met.
"The whole idea is to encourage  early adopters," said Ford spokeswoman Jennifer Moore.
 
New Ford hybrids purchased on or after April 1, 2010 will not be eligible for a tax credit.
