http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1089802_electric-car-risk-different-not-worse-says-top-nhtsa-regulator
Electric Car Risk: Different, Not Worse, Says Top NHTSA Regulator
By Stephen Edelstein  Jan 22, 2014

[images  
http://images.thecarconnection.com/lrg/2014-nissan-leaf_100451860_l.jpg
2014 Nissan Leaf

http://images.thecarconnection.com/lrg/2012-tesla-model-s-charging-connector_100365835_l.jpg
2012 Tesla Model S Charging Connector
]

Are electric cars as safe as cars with internal-combustion engines?

That's been the subject of much debate--not to mention inaccurate media
coverage--but the truth may entail more than a simple "yes or "no."

During an interview at the 2014 Detroit Auto Show, National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA) deputy administrator David Friedman told
Bloomberg Businessweek that electric cars don't pose a greater safety risk
than gasoline cars.

But, he said, they do pose different risks.

Friedman--who currently leads the NHTSA after the recent departure of
Administrator David Strickland--said an agency team, including engineers and
people who study consumer behavior, is now investigating drivers' perception
of electric cars.

He said consumers "aren't used to the new challenges that electric vehicles
pose."

Those might range from the need to monitor external equipment connected to
the car, including charging apparatus, to an awareness that electric cars'
range can be greatly affected by speed, use of accessories like heaters, and
the ambient temperature.

Friedman's comments came following a mild dispute with Tesla Motors CEO Elon
Musk over the company's response to customer complaints of overheating wall
chargers.

After several reports of adapters overheating in the charging stations
provided by Tesla--including one November incident that is said to have
started a garage fire in Irvine, California--Tesla issued a software update
and began shipping new adapters with thermal fuses meant to stop charging in
the event of overheating.

The fix was declared a formal recall last week, but Musk and other Tesla
officials suggested the term "recall" was inappropriate because customers
did not have to bring their cars to service centers.

Musk has also questioned whether the house fire was caused by a Model S wall
charger, or the house's faulty wiring.

Friedman downplayed the drama, saying that Musk and Tesla are doing a good
job of responding to the NHTSA's requests.

The recall comes after media attention to three accident-related Model S
fires that occurred last fall appears to have abated.

Two fires happened in the United States after cars hit road debris, while
the third happened in Mexico after the driver apparently jumped a curb. No
one was injured in any of those incidents.
[© Green Car Reports]




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