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E-car startups try to compete with major companies
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 13 - 01 - 2009


Several startup automakers are in hot
pursuit of electric-powered vehicles, but they face an
uphill road as they challenge major car companies like
Toyota and General Motors in the race for the green car
market, according to AP.
California-based Tesla Motors Inc. and Fisker Automotive
are displaying cars at the North American International
Auto Show this week, grabbing attention with sleek
electric-drive vehicles that combine environmentally
friendly chic with sports car sex appeal.
Tesla, which started in 2004, showcased its $109,000
all-electric two-seat Roadster sports car at the Detroit
show and hopes to unveil its Model S electric car in late
February, CEO Elon Musk said in an address Tuesday before
the Society of Automotive Analysts.
Musk announced that Tesla has been working with Daimler AG
since late 2007 in a partnership to produce 1,000 electric
Smart microcars. He said Tesla will produce the battery
pack and charger for the vehicle, which is expected to be
leased to customers.
«If the 1,000-vehicle fleet is a success and the
economics make sense and the product is compelling, that
will expand to tens of thousands of vehicles per year,»
Musk said. «Daimler is really looking at this as a very
serious product.»
Musk said the deal was nonexclusive and Tesla was looking
to establish more strategic relationships with other
automakers.
Fisker is showing off the production version of its
$87,900 Karma plug-in luxury sports sedan, a four-seater
with solar panels and the ability to drive gas-free for 50
miles (80 kilometers). Fisker, which expects the cars to
roll off the production line in October, also unveiled the
Karma S, a convertible expected in 2011.
«We really don't have any competition, at least in the
next two years,» in the luxury plug-in segment, said
Henrik Fisker, the company's founder. «Being able to do 50
miles on electric-only and then drive after as a normal
car, as a normal hybrid, there's no other car that can do
that.»
All swagger aside, the startups have plenty of doubters.
Many question whether the niche companies will be able to
survive the contraction of the U.S. auto market and the
recent difficulty obtaining credit that is key to financing
future growth.
«No matter what (the car) does, no matter what's under
the hood, you can't sell tens of thousands of an $84,000
car in the U.S. today,» said Shai Agassi, founder and
chief executive of Better Place, a Palo Alto, California,
company developing electric vehicle networks. «The people
who were in that buying market are not buying right now.»
Tesla said in October that it would push back the
production of its Model S all-electric sedan, expected to
have a more reasonable $60,000 price tag, until mid-2011 to
focus on its Roadster and a profitable powertrain unit. The
company said it would reduce its work force but did not
elaborate.
«It was already a tough road for them and things got even
more difficult,» said Brian Fan, director of research for
CleanTech Group, a San Francisco-based investment firm.
Fisker raised more than $90 million in venture capital in
2008, the company said. Its investors include top venture
capital firms such as California-based Kleiner Perkins
Caufield & Byers, of which former Vice President Al Gore is
a partner, and Palo Alto Investors.
Tesla has raised at least $165 million since 2006,
according to estimates by analysts, and its top investors
include Musk, former eBay Inc. President Jeffrey Skoll, and
Google Inc.'s founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin. Tesla
announced $40 million in financing in November to expand
its powertrain venture and continue future development.
Both are seeking significant funding from the Energy
Department's $25 billion loan program to develop advanced
vehicles. The outgoing Bush administration has not yet
announced any awards.
Mike Donoughe, Tesla's executive vice president for
vehicle engineering and manufacturing, said 150 Roadsters
have been delivered and the company expects to build at a
pace of 30 per week by April. Tesla officials said Musk, a
PayPal co-founder, has made significant personal
investments in the company and wants it to succeed.
«The words he used with me a few weeks ago was, 'I'll
sweat blood to make this successful,»' Donoughe said. «I
think we all have that same approach from everywhere in the
company.»
The companies face the typical growing pains of a startup
auto company along with the challenges of electric
transportation, competing with billions of dollars in
investments by General Motors Corp. and Toyota Motor Corp.
GM is hoping to bring the Chevrolet Volt extended-range
electric vehicle to the market by 2010, and Toyota outlined
plans in Detroit to bring an all-electric car to market by
2012.
David Cole, president of the Center for Automotive
Research in Ann Arbor, Mich., said the complexity of
integrating electric drive into a vehicle's powertrain
could not be underestimated. And even with extensive
engineering teams, the large companies are grappling with
uncertainties about how lithium-ion batteries will perform
in the vehicles long-term.
«What (the startup companies are) finding is that it's
not quite as easy to do as it is to talk,» Cole said.
Jim Lentz, Toyota's top U.S. sales executive, said the new
companies likely will foster innovation and competition.
«At the price point where they're entering the market,
they're at a very different place,» said Lentz, president
of Toyota Motor Sales USA. «It's interesting for us to
look at the technologies and how they're developing their
electronics.»
Other startups seeking the electric path include Chinese
automaker BYD Co., Miles Electric Vehicles and Aptera
Motors.
Paul Wilbur, Aptera's president and chief executive, said
the startup had taken more than 3,700 deposits for its 2e
electric vehicle, a two-passenger, three-wheeled car which
starts production later this year. The vehicle, with a
range of 125 miles per charge, is expected to cost between
$25,000 and $40,000, he said.
Brian Wynne, president of the Electric Drive
Transportation Association, said developers of plug-ins and
electrics will have an ally in President-elect Barack
Obama, who has set a goal of 1 million plug-in hybrid
vehicles by 2015 and was an early supporter of plug-in tax
credits of up to $7,500 while serving in the Senate.


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