That is a very uninformed article about KERS.
> ... Max Mosely of F1 has announced that all cars will
> become hybrid by 2013, ...
KERS is planned for 2009 onwards. Although not compulsory, if you choose not to have it you will be at a disadvantage. Since we are talking about racing that effectively means the cars should all be hybrids in 2009.
> KERS doesn’t store as much energy as a traditional
> hybrid system, but it only weighs 55 pounds and the
> limited energy storage capacity is well suited
> for Formula-style racing.
The weight of a KERS is not regulated and so should vary from team to team.
It is not well suited to formula one racing. Weight is transferred to the front on braking and initially KERS will act on the rear only. The rear already has about 800 HP and until the engine runs out of power, ie cannot spin the wheels, a rear wheel KERS is effectively useless.
> The biggest difference between KERS and a regular
> battery-electric hybrid is that KERS stores recovered
> waste energy in a rotating flywheel.
Teams are free to choose the technology they want. For example it would be surprising if Toyota went for anything other than an electric motor KERS and not a flywheel.
The guy writing the article seems to have heard about one prospective KERS unit that is in development and not only assumed that it will reach the starting grid, but that all the cars will have it.