http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f1003ece-530f-11e3-8586-00144feabdc0.html Bhutan aims high with Renault-Nissan electric car plan By Victor Mallet in Thimpu and Henry Foy in London November 22, 2013
One of the world’s most remote capital cities is aiming to become an electric vehicle “hotspot” and a showcase for green technology, according to the prime minister of the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan. Tshering Tobgay and other government officials said in Thimpu this week that the plan was to start replacing official government vehicles with the Nissan Leaf, an electric car, by March. Taxis and family cars would be gradually supplanted by locally assembled electric vehicles. Carlos Ghosn, chief executive of Renault-Nissan, met Mr Tobgay in Thimpu recently for talks on the supply of cars and battery charging systems. Mr Tobgay also has been in touch with other electric vehicle makers including Tesla of the US. “This government is going to attempt to make Thimpu an electric vehicle hotspot. We are confident that electric vehicles can take off here,” Mr Tobgay said in an interview with foreign reporters. Bhutan’s main export is electricity sent to India from hydro-electric plants, but the prime minister noted that almost all the proceeds of these clean energy exports were then used to import fossil fuels for transport. Bhutan, a mountainous and largely Buddhist nation squeezed between India and China, is known for championing gross national happiness (GNH) instead of focusing merely on gross domestic product, and environmental sustainability is an important part of the GNH philosophy. Some Bhutanese say the car plan is a “pet project” of Mr Tobgay, whose democratically elected government – the second in the country’s history – has been in office for only three months. But Bhutanese officials, as well as Nissan executives and Tashi Wangchuk of Thunder Motors, the assembler of local prototypes, say Thimpu and its population of 120,000 present the ideal opportunity for such a venture: electricity is cheap; most road trips are short; residents depend heavily on a fleet of 3,500 small taxis; and the introduction of hundreds of electric vehicles will have an immediate impact in a small city that would be impossible to achieve in a metropolis such as Tokyo. “You put 2,000 vehicles in Thimpu and suddenly Thimpu is an electric city,” said Mr Tobgay. A typical taxi driver in the city spends 800 ngultrum ($13) a day on fuel, whereas recharging would cost 10 ngultrum (16 US cents) or less, Bhutanese officials say. Nissan confirmed it was in “commercial talks” with Bhutan over supply of the Leaf and charging infrastructure. “Nissan applauds the initiative taken by the Bhutanese government to leap-frog oil-dependent mobility in favour of zero-emission transport and is keen to support their ambitions,” the company said. Earlier this month Mr Ghosn admitted that global sales of electric cars were more than four years behind expectations. The segment is one of the most fiercely contested battlegrounds in the global automotive industry as manufacturers race to dominate the future market for green cars. Mr Tobgay is seeking the support of foreign donors for the project but seems determined even without aid to make Thimpu a research and development centre for electric vehicle technology. All personal car imports are currently banned to save foreign exchange, but the government will introduce legislation to parliament this year to exempt electric cars from import duties. Thunder’s Mr Wangchuk, a Yale-trained environmental scientist turned entrepreneur, said his company had already spent $2m on R&D and was spending another $1m on producing the first 100 vehicles for sale, using the bodies of new Maruti cars from India, imported batteries and electric motors, and proprietary technology for the interface between the engine and the gearbox. “Electricity is like oil for us – it’s the most abundant resource, and it makes a lot of sense to go all electric,” he said. “My own target (for Bhutan) is a 70 per cent reduction in fossil fuel imports by 2020.” [© Financial Times Ltd 2013] http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/south-asia/Bhutans-taxis-govt-cars-set-to-make-way-for-electric-vehicles/articleshow/26230911.cms Bhutan's taxis, govt cars set to make way for electric vehicles Nov 23, 2013 - THIMPHU: Bhutan has drawn up ambitious plans to replace its taxis and government vehicles with electric cars in a bid to make the national capital Thimpu an electric vehicles hotspot ... For all EVLN posts use: http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=search_page&node=413529&query=evln&sort=date Here are today's archive-only EV posts: EVLN: U.S.-made Chinese-BYD electric-bus fleet-sales are key EVLN: Go-slow-conservative UT Rep's move SLC out of the ice-age EVLN: $.02/mi Firefly 3whl service EV r:60/90mi ts:45mph 6h@3k-L2 EVLN: German Carmakers To Build More EVs in China Amid Smog Concerns EVLN: Confessions of a I-35 Tesla-lead-foot, a whoosh come true (video) + EVLN: Kia Ray EV first drive review {brucedp.150m.com} -- View this message in context: http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Bhutan-s-Renault-Nissan-electric-car-plan-tp4666454.html Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org For EV drag racing discussion, please use NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)
