San Francisco Plans To Be Electric Car Capital
US: November 24, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO - San Francisco Bay Area cities promised to build the electric
car capital of the United States, announcing a plan Thursday to work with
start-up Better Place to put battery-powered autos on the road in 2012.
Mayors of San Francisco, Silicon Valley capital San Jose, Oakland and other
cities in the region said they would offer incentives and standardize
infrastructure with Better Place, a start-up that aims to offer electric
cars as a service, like a cell phone, at prices similar or below standard
cars.
The San Francisco Bay Area has the reputation as one of the most liberal and
environmentally active parts of the country, and as the economic downturn
sweeps through the tech sector it is looking to clean technology for a new
source of jobs.
"I'm a guy driving a hybrid, and I don't feel particularly good about it,"
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom told a news conference, adding that
all-electric cars would be a "game-changer" for cutting carbon emissions
which cause global warming.
Nissan Motor Co. Ltd and Renault have signed on with other Better Place
projects. Better Place is developing networks in Denmark, Israel, and
Australia.
Better Place Chief Executive Shai Agassi in an interview said the network to
support the cars with charging stations would cost about $1 billion with a
quarter of that needed for a test phase in 2010-2011.
"We've got a year-and-a-half to bring the capital in," he said,
acknowledging the tough economic environment and arguing that the network
would be a good investment.
He told reporters that he hoped the US "Big Three" automakers, GM, Ford
Motor Co and Chrysler, would join the plan.
(Reporting by Peter Henderson, Editing Leslie Gevirtz)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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