http://www.bbc.com/news/business-36402942
Why do they love electric cars in the Arctic Circle?
[20160609]  Chris Gibson

[images  
http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/660/cpsprodpb/13508/production/_89821197_img_5413.jpg
Elisabeth Bryn loves her electric car in snowy Tromso

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/18328/production/_89821199_img_5418.jpg
Norway's snowy Tromso may not be the first place you would expect to find a
Tesla showroom

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Screengrab of Elon Musk tweet

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/7379/production/_89916592_thinkstockphotos-487419563.jpg
Electric car at charging point  Image copyright THINKSTOCK

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Elisabeth Bryn can see data about her Nissan Leaf electric car on her tablet

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Elisabeth Bryn loves her electric car, but some of her friends worry about
flat batteries
]

Tromso, a Norwegian city known as the "Gateway to the Arctic", receives no
sunlight for two months of the year.

Yet this remote, beautiful, snowy city is the unlikely focus of the global
electric car industry, attracting the attention of Silicon Valley
entrepreneurs such as Elon Musk, founder of electric car maker Tesla.

His company has recently opened a showroom there - its most northerly
outpost.

Why? Because Norway, it seems, is simply nuts about electric cars.
The country is the world leader in electric cars per capita and has just
become the fourth country in the world to have 100,000 of them on the roads.

When you consider the other nations on the list are the US (population: 320
million), Japan (pop. 130 million) and China (pop. 1.35 billion), then that
is quite an achievement for this rugged, sparsely populated country of just
five million.

Some of its politicians want to ban the sale of new petrol and diesel cars
by 2025, which prompted Musk to tweet: "What an amazingly awesome country.
You guys rock!!"

On an earlier visit in April, he attributed a lot of Tesla's success to the
country's pioneering stance on electric cars.
So how has Norway managed it?

Tesla founder Elon Musk welcomed Norway's [no ice] plan, although it may
never become law

Elisabeth Bryn helps explain the answer. The 56-year-old teacher enjoys
driving in the icy streets of Tromso and she can barely contain her
excitement as she misses our turn.

"It is such a good feeling to drive a clean car. It means I have a clean
conscience and it works out cheaper in the long run," she tells the BBC.

But it is economic incentive as much as environmental concern that is
fuelling the rise in green cars - Norway introduced a raft of generous
subsidies to encourage people to go electric.

Norway's green car sweeteners
No purchase taxes
Exemption from 25% VAT on purchase
Low annual road tax
No charges on toll roads or ferries
Free municipal parking
Access to bus lanes
50% reduction in company car tax
No VAT on leasing

It launched an aggressive tax policy towards high-polluting cars, while
offering zero tax on zero-emission cars. This "polluter pays" policy brought
the cost of an electric car into line with a conventionally powered one.

Bryn is clearly shrewd about the numbers and says the entire cost of her car
will be recouped within eight years thanks to the tax and fuel savings.

Free juice
But aren't people worried about running out of power? Lack of range is the
electric car's Achilles heel after all.

This is where Norway comes into its own, as Bryn demonstrates at a public
charging point on an industrial estate out of town.

The electricity being pumped into her car is free.
Norway is fortunate enough to have close to 100% renewable and cheap hydro
power production.

According to the Norwegian Electric Vehicle Association, even if all three
million cars on the country's roads were electric, they would suck up just
5-6% of the annual hydro power electricity production.

Rapid charging points can pump her Nissan Leaf with up to 80% charge in just
30 minutes. Alternatively, Bryn can charge her car at home at a much slower
pace overnight.

It helps that Norway is also the biggest oil producer in Western Europe and
the world's third largest exporter of natural gas. In other words, Norway is
rich enough to subsidise its electric car lifestyle.

Range anxiety
But despite these considerable perks, not everyone is convinced.
In Oslo there are more than 14,000 electric cars - about 30% of the market.
But in the more northern reaches - cities like Tromso - enthusiasm has been
more muted.

This may be explained by the tough terrain and "range anxiety" - concerns
that a flat battery will leave them stranded in arctic conditions.

[image]  The northern lights reflected in the sea  Image copyright
THINKSTOCK  Image caption  Can electric cars perform as well in far northern
climes?

Studies have shown that electric car performance can deteriorate markedly in
extreme cold or hot conditions. And Nissan, whose Leaf model is the biggest
selling electric vehicle in Norway, admits that the car's 124-mile maximum
range can fall significantly in icier conditions when the heating, lights
and demister are all draining the charge more thirstily.

Bryn says such concerns have put off some of her friends: "They have a cabin
deep in the countryside and said they just couldn't trust an electric car to
get them there. They said there just weren't enough charging points."

Charging from the front
Yet Tesla's new showroom in Tromso, and the steady growth in the number of
public charging points, demonstrates the industry's commitment to spreading
the green message no matter how inhospitable the environment.

And the rest of the world is learning lessons from Norway.
Germany has just announced a €1bn (£784m; $1.1bn) incentive scheme to get
more consumers buying electric cars, for example.

Christian Ruoff, publisher of US electric car magazine, Charged, sums it up:
"Electric car makers in the US see Norway as a window into the future.

"Norway shows that if governments can make electric cars as affordable as
petrol equivalents then motorists, even in the Arctic Circle, will buy them.

"It also busts the myths that electric cars and their batteries are only
suitable for cities with more moderate climates like Oslo or San Francisco."
[© 2016 BBC]




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