OK, probably no argument at all that financing the development of electric  
cars
by raising gas prices through the roof is a REALY BAD IDEA. 
 
This said, what about Friedman's argument that we need an electric car  
industry ?
Without it, China wins. 
 
That is doubtless an excessive conclusion, but to dramatize the  problem.
 
China is developing its electric car industry using the power of state  
capitalism.
The question is : How can America compete ?  To do  this requires 
multi-billions
in investment. For the life of me, I don't see where the libertarian model  
of economics
is relevant. Just thought I'd make this observation.
 
Billy
 
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 (http://www.nytimes.com/)   
 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/26/opinion/26friedman.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1285520473-2t/0EfyjAVp7k7cVdWBVCw&pagewanted=print#)
 




 
____________________________________
September 25, 2010

Their Moon Shot and  Ours
By _THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/thomaslfriedman/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 
 
China is doing moon shots. Yes, that’s plural. When I say “moon shots” I 
mean  big, multibillion-dollar, 25-year-horizon, game-changing investments. 
China has  at least four going now: one is building a network of ultramodern 
airports;  another is building a web of high-speed trains connecting major 
cities; a third  is in bioscience, where the Beijing Genomics Institute this 
year ordered 128 DNA  sequencers — from America — giving China the largest 
number in the world in one  institute to launch its own stem cell/genetic 
engineering industry; and,  finally, Beijing just announced that it was 
providing $15 billion in seed money  for the country’s leading auto and battery 
companies to create an electric car  industry, starting in 20 pilot cities. In 
essence, China Inc. just named its  dream team of 16-state-owned 
enterprises to move China off oil and into the next  industrial growth engine: 
electric cars.  
Not to worry. America today also has its own multibillion-dollar,  
25-year-horizon, game-changing moon shot: fixing Afghanistan.  
This contrast is not good. I was recently at a Washington Nationals 
baseball  game. While waiting for a hot dog, I overheard the conversation 
behind 
me. A  management consultant for a big national firm was telling his 
colleagues that  his job was to “market products to the Department of Homeland 
Security.” I  thought to myself: “Oh, my! Inventing studies about terrorist 
threats and  selling them to the U.S. government, is that an industry now?”  
We’re out of balance — the balance between security and prosperity. We 
need  to be in a race with China, not just Al Qaeda. Let’s start with electric 
cars.  
The electric car industry is pivotal for three reasons, argues Shai Agassi, 
 the C.E.O. of Better Place, a global electric car company that next year 
will  begin operating national electric car networks in Israel and Denmark. 
First, the  auto industry was the foundation for America’s manufacturing 
middle class.  Second, the country that replaces gasoline-powered vehicles with 
 
electric-powered vehicles — in an age of steadily rising oil prices and 
steadily  falling battery prices — will have a huge cost advantage and 
independence from  imported oil. Third, electric cars are full of power 
electronics 
and software.  “Think of the applications industry that will be spun out 
from electric cars,”  says Agassi. It will be the iPhone on steroids.  
Europe is using $7-a-gallon gasoline to stimulate the market for electric  
cars; China is using $5-a-gallon and naming electric cars as one of the  
industrial pillars for its five-year growth plan. And America? President Obama  
has directed stimulus money at electric cars, but he is unwilling to do the 
one  thing that would create the sustained consumer pull required to grow 
an electric  car industry here: raise taxes on gasoline. Price matters. Sure, 
the Moore’s Law  of electric cars — “the cost per mile of the electric car 
battery will be cut in  half every 18 months” — will steadily drive the 
cost down, says Agassi, but only  once we get scale production going. U.S. 
companies can do that on their own or  in collaboration with Chinese ones. But 
God save us if we don’t do it at all.  
Two weeks ago, I visited the Coda Automotive battery facility in Tianjin,  
China — a joint venture between U.S. innovators and investors, China’s 
Lishen  battery company and China National Offshore Oil Company. Yes, China’s 
oil  company is using profits to develop batteries.  
Kevin Czinger, Coda’s C.E.O., who drove me around Manhattan in his company’
s  soon-to-be-in-production electric car last week, laid out what is going 
on. The  backbone of the modern U.S. economy was locally made cars powered 
by locally  produced oil. It started us on a huge growth spurt. In recent 
decades, though,  that industry was supplanted by foreign-made cars run on 
foreign oil, so “now  every time we buy a car we’re exporting $15,000 of 
capital, paying for it with  borrowed money and running it on foreign energy 
sources,” says Czinger. “We’ve  gone from autos being a 
middle-class-making-machine to a  middle-class-destroying-machine.” A U.S. 
electric car/battery 
industry would  reverse that.  
The Coda, 14,000 of which will be on the road in California over the next  
year and can travel 100 miles on one overnight charge, is a combination of  
Chinese-made batteries and complex American-system electronics — all  
final-assembled in Oakland (price: $37,000). It is a win-win start-up for both  
countries.  
If we both now create the market incentives for consumers to buy electric  
cars, and the plug-in infrastructure for people to drive them everywhere, it 
 will be a win-win moon shot for both countries. The electric car industry 
will  flourish in the U.S. and China, and together we’ll tackle the next 
challenge:  using auto battery innovations to build big storage batteries for 
wind and  solar. However, if only China puts the gasoline prices and 
infrastructure in  place, the industry will gravitate there. It will be a moon 
shot 
for them, a  hobby for us, and you’ll import your new electric car from 
China just like  you’re now importing your oil from Saudi  Arabia

-- 
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