Factory in an abandoned guava jelly plant near Guapiles, produce up to 1,000
cars a year, later kits to build cars anywhere

http://www.ticotimes.net/More-news/News-Briefs/Meet-CambYoCar-the-first-car-to-be-designed-and-built-in-Costa-Rica_Monday-November-25-2013
Meet CambYoCar: the first car to be designed and built in Costa Rica
November 25, 2013  By Lindsay Fendt

[image  / Lindsay Fendt
http://static2.cdn.ticotimes.net/var/tico/storage/images/media/images/news-photos/cambyocar/2019758-1-eng-US/CambYoCar_newsfull_h.jpg
CambYoCar - With a hybrid and electric model, CambYoCar could help ease
Costa Rica's emissions problems. “Our goal here is to change the world,”
says inventor Jesse Blenn
]

Jesse Blenn, CambYoCar's inventor, sits with a miniature model of his future
car.

Looking at the upward-opening electric doors and sleek design of CambYoCar’s
miniature prototype, you might think the purple-haired Barbie seated behind
the wheel drove it straight out of the movie “Back to the Future.”

Although the car looks like a compact version of the DeLorean, the
technology needed to build it is far from futuristic. 

Costa Rican isn't known for producing automobiles, because traditional car
factories are impractical and expensive here.

According to data from the Chamber of Used Car Importers, in the past five
years Costa Rica has imported an annual average of 35,000 used cars and
40,000 new ones. But the electric CambYoCar is about to change that: With
sales expected to begin in 2015, it will become the first car designed and
manufactured in Costa Rica.

“Costa Rica doesn’t have the machinery to make a traditional car frame,”
Jesse Blenn, the car’s inventor, told The Tico Times. “We want something you
can make in a rural area.”

A former airplane mechanic and blimp-design consultant from Kansas, Blenn
began designing CambYoCar on his fruit farm in Heredia, north of the
capital. Using engineering techniques developed for aircraft, Blenn designed
a simplified frame that can be assembled in most auto shops.

Instead of using heavy machinery and imported steel, CambYoCar is made from
balsa wood and aluminum. Normally an expensive construction material, balsa
grows easily in Costa Rica, making it an affordable alternative to heavy
metals.

The more elaborate parts of the car will be produced in the CambYoCar
factory, an abandoned guava jelly plant near the Caribbean slope town of
Guapiles. Eventually the company will produce basic kits to enable the cars
to be built anywhere.

At about $18,000 a unit, CambYoCar will not be the cheapest vehicle on the
market, but it will be the cheapest of the electric and hybrid models.

With Costa Rica's 2021 carbon-neutrality deadline looming, policy makers are
trudging forward with reforms to reduce emissions. But as Environment
Minister René Castro told The Tico Times in October, vehicle emissions are
the great “Achilles heel” of the nation’s carbon-neutrality goals.

A study from the University of Costa Rica this year found that traffic in
San José increases car emissions by 30 percent, and numbers from Costa
Rica’s vehicle inspections company reveal that more than a third of Costa
Rica’s cars are less efficient models up to 20 years old.

“Something has to change,” Blenn said. “Costa Rica needs electric cars. The
market is ready for a Costa Rican-made electric car.”

According to Costa Rican Customs officials, fewer than 200 hybrid cars were
imported in the last five years. Despite sales- and import-tax incentives,
Ticos still seem hesitant to invest in a green vehicle.

“The volume of sales hasn’t really changed for us,” said Sergio Gutiérrez,
general manager for Reva, a low-cost electric car dealership in Costa Rica.
“The biggest challenge is not being able to offer the lowest price on the
car market.” 

For those willing to spend money to reduce their carbon footprint, however,
an electric car is attractive in Costa Rica, which generates more than 90
percent of its energy from renewable sources.

A huge electric car demand is not necessary for Blenn’s modest first phase.
He estimates the factory will initially produce a car a week, later
expanding to up to 1,000 cars a year.

Though he has struggled to find private investors, Blenn is not the only one
excited about his project. CambYoCar won first place in the industrial
projects and most environmentally responsible categories at the National
Business Plan competition. Blenn also took home ¢65 million ($120,000) in
cash from the Bank System for Development’s seed money competition, just
enough to get the project rolling.

“Our goal here is to change the world,” Blenn said. “To change the world we
have to change the car.”
[© ticotimes.net]




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