Friday, June 27, 2008

We can thank the car companies for the oil fix we're in

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Look at the background of this cute Norwegian car called a Think: (my bold)
Think's journey to the world market has been similarly full of detours. The company (previously called Pivco) began in 1991 and by 1998 had built more than 1,000 small and charismatic electric runabouts, sold mostly in Norway (where you still see a few on the road). Then, in 1999, the company was bought by the Yankee giant Ford Motor Co., which was scrambling at the time to comply with California's Zero Emission Vehicle mandate, essentially requiring automakers to build fleets of electric vehicles. Ford renamed the company Think Nordic and began a complete redesign of the car. When, in 2003, the American automakers succeeded in modifying California's mandate, Detroit's flirtation with electronic vehicles ended. General Motors Corp. famously killed the EV1 program, and Ford sold Think to a Swiss electronics firm.

"The lawyers stopped us," says Ole Fretheim, the factory's manager. Think went bankrupt in 2006.

The irony is that Ford had already poured $150 million into the Think City project, engineering among other things the car's rigid steel space frame, the crash structure. If and when it comes to the U.S. market -- the company opened an office in Menlo Park, Calif., earlier this year with plans to sell cars stateside in 2009 -- the Think City will be a rarity: A full-speed electric car meeting U.S. and European crash standards.

"The car was 95% complete when Ford stopped development in 2002," says Fretheim. In the long run, he says, the down time might have been a good thing. "When we started work again we had better options for batteries."
95% complete. We almost were there and the automakers tubed it. Why? Why? Why?

In response, here are five electric cars you can buy right now. (link via NTodd at Dohiyi Mir)

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Because their corporate buddies, the oil guys, wouldn't like it if they cut them out of transportation.

ellroon said...

Jesus. So economies have to collapse, people have to starve, wars have to be fought so the oil guys can get their money.

Lovely.

Anonymous said...

In the background of Who Framed Roger Rabbit is the true story of LA's trolley system. GM made the city an offer it couldn't refuse and the trolley system was dismantled.

Money is all they care about.

Distributorcap said...

who also keeps fighting the increased mandates in gas mileage.


doesn anyone not believe that the true govt is ExxonMobil

darkblack said...

DaimlerChrysler did the same thing with Ballard back in the 90's - buy up the project because of imminent California emission standards, then bury it and let le bon temps roulez when those same standards got knocked down in state court.

Hand in glove - just like the Red Cars.

ellroon said...

Omg, darkblack. I had no idea the wonderful Red Cars that were pulled in Southern California were not the only ones. Thanks for the link.