% Tesla-S' near 300mi range is not mentioned, yet refueling time is %

http://www.autotalk.com/global-automakers-split-on-green-car-strategy-24059/
Global automakers split on ‘green car’ strategy
By AFP  June 19, 2014

Global automakers are locked in a showdown evoking the video format wars of
the 1980s, as they bet on what eco-friendly vehicles will prevail in the
battle for dominance of the burgeoning low-emissions sector.

In a contest reminiscent of the scrap for pre-eminence in the home video
market, which pitched Betamax against VHS, huge auto firms are going all out
for very different technologies.

Toyota, which is ending a battery deal with US electric car leader Tesla, is
concentrating on mass-producing a fuel-cell vehicle, along with smaller
rival Honda.

Nissan, by contrast, has bet the farm on all-electrics, unveiling its second
model this month — despite weak sales of its flagship Leaf — and is pushing
the technology in China, where officials are scrambling to contain an air
pollution crisis.

Japan’s number-two automaker is also reportedly in talks with Germany’s BMW
and Tesla about standardizing re-charging systems, after the US company took
the rare step of agreeing to share its patents with competitors to boost
lacklustre electric vehicle production.

“Nissan and Tesla… came out with very ambitious goals for the technology but
had to backtrack, partly because demand… wasn’t strong enough,” said Stefan
Bratzel, director of Germany’s Center of Automotive Management.

“Daimler, Toyota and General Motors are the most advanced in fuel cells, but
the problem is the high cost of the technology and necessary
infrastructure.”

Limited range, high price
Analysts say very low or zero-emission vehicles will dominate the next phase
of independent travel, with governments everywhere rolling out stricter
emissions standards.

This near-certainty is sparking massive investment, with Japan’s seven major
car manufacturers expected to spend a record $24 billion on green car
research and development this year, according to the Nikkei business daily.

Detractors says electric vehicles simply shift emissions to the fossil-fuel
burning power plants that provide the energy to recharge their batteries.
They are also hampered by a short driving range.

Fuel cell cars, on the other hand, are seen as the Holy Grail of green cars
as they’re powered by a chemical reaction of hydrogen and oxygen, which
produces nothing more harmful than water.

Still largely experimental, fuel-cell vehicles could get a boost as various
jurisdictions, including the US state of California, launch new hydrogen
refueling stations.

Toyota is eying a 500-kilometre (300-mile) range for its fuel-cell car —
more than twice the Leaf’s current range — and much faster re-juicing.

The company, while not abandoning electric altogether, sees the fuel cell as
the next logical step after its big early success with the Prius
gas-electric hybrid, which has sold about 3.7 million units since its launch
in the late 1990s.

“Electric vehicles are still so limited by the cruising range,” Nobuyori
Kodaira, Toyota’s executive vice president said in a recent interview.

“Hydrogen can be recharged in three minutes… Quick-charging an electric
vehicle still takes about half an hour.”

Different paths, same goals
Cleaner power generation, however, may boost the appeal of electric cars,
said Jos Dings, director of Brussels-based NGO Transport & Environment.

“If… we manage to make electricity in a much cleaner way — there is a lot of
investment in renewable energy — then it can definitely be a sustainable way
forward,” he said.

Still, Nissan’s Leaf has shifted about 120,000 units since its launch nearly
four years ago, way below expectations.

But its chief executive Carlos Ghosn — a steadfast cheerleader of electric
cars who has scoffed at rivals’ ambitious plans for a commercialized
fuel-cell vehicle — said new re-charging stations will be crucial to demand.

“All of it is very closely linked to the development of infrastructure, but
we are seeing more and more competitors coming onto the scene which is
always a tell-tale sign,” he told AFP earlier this year.

Ghosn was speaking in Bhutan, where Nissan sealed a deal to supply the tiny
Himalayan kingdom’s government with a fleet of its green vehicles as it eyes
an all-electric transport policy.

Governments throwing their weight behind strict roadside pollution standards
and other environmentally-minded policies is crucial, analysts said.

“I don’t think GM, Ford and Chrysler look at green cars as a profit
opportunity or big growth opportunity in which they are sensing a lot of
consumer demand or growth — their goal is to meet what the government
requires from them,” said US-based auto analyst Jack Nerad.

Whether one technology ultimately reigns supreme, or they co-exist with a
patchwork of refueling stations, may not matter much, added the environment
group’s Dings.

“All car makers are now seriously investing in developing these
technologies, seeing how customers react to them, seeing how they work on
the road and how much they cost,” he said.

“They all chose different paths and that’s fine, as long as the solutions
deliver.”
[© autotalk.com]




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

http://cleantechnica.com/2014/06/27/free-solar-powered-carport/
Free solar carport for N. CA communities registered for PACE program

http://forbesindia.com/article/work/inside-the-reva-factory/38066/0
Inside the Reva EV factory and views of the production line

http://auto.ndtv.com/news/mahindra-will-review-tesla-patents-for-its-electric-vehicles-564932
Mahindra Will Review Tesla Patents for its Electric Vehicles
...
http://www.techtree.com/content/news/6598/mahindra-use-teslas-patent-free-electric-car-technology.html
...
http://www.cartrade.com/blog/2014/greens/mahindra-halo-an-electric-car-concept-from-india-698.html
Mahindra Halo - An Electric Car Concept From India

http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2014/06/21/why-tesla-not-fuel-cells-owns-the-automotive-futur.aspx
Why Tesla, Not Fuel Cells, Owns the Automotive Future (subscription)

http://greenpowertrain.automotive-business-review.com/news/juice-bar-ev-launches-new-customizable-charging-station-230614-4299610
Juice Bar Customizable L2&1 EVSE> branding,advertising,sponsorship,POS
+
EVLN: MG EV concept UK first drive review r:~71mi


{brucedp.150m.com}



--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-VHS-vs-Betamax-automakers-chose-different-paths-tp4670187.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)

Reply via email to