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Climate One

EVs + Smart Grid. Horsepower: Accelerating EVs into the Fast Lane

Climate One

Climate One

Earth Sciences, News, Science, Social Sciences, News Commentary

4.7583 Ratings

🗓️ 18 January 2011

⏱️ 63 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Horsepower: Accelerating EVs into the Fast Lane Anthony Eggert, Commissioner, California Energy Commission, Transportation Lead Diane Wittenberg, Executive Director, California EV Strategic Plan Diarmuid O'Connell, Vice President of Business Development, Tesla Motors Marc Geller, Co-founder, Plug-In America Greg Dalton, Founder of Climate One, Moderator Born before the Model T, revived and then extinguished a decade ago by GM, the electric vehicle is poised to dominate the global car industry, says this panel of transportation experts convened by Climate One. “The demand for these vehicles is greater than the supply,” says Marc Geller, Co-Founder, Plug in America. “Through this year it would appear that Nissan and Chevrolet have all but sold out of their first 35,000 vehicles, with the Leaf and the Volt. There are customers who are ready for electric and plug-in hybrids for many different reasons, but it’s really an issue of getting the cars to market.” Manufacturers are responding, says Diarmuid O’Connell, Vice President of Business Development, Tesla Motors, because this time there is a market, and money to be made. “This is hardly a philanthropic endeavor that we’ve taken on,” he says. One potential obstacle to widespread adoption of EVs is their (for now) higher upfront cost. Anthony Eggert, former Commissioner at the California Energy Commission, stresses the low lifetime cost of owning an EV. “You really want to look at total cost of ownership. It’s not just the initial purchase price of the vehicle, which is going to be higher,” he says. Diane Wittenberg, Executive Director, California EV Strategic Plan, agrees. “An average conventional vehicle, to drive 100 miles, costs about $6 in fuel; with pure electric, it would be about $2. Most people don’t know that off the top of their heads. It’s an education challenge,” she says. Manufacturers must also contend with customer fears that EVs will leave them stranded. “We should be clear when we’re speaking about charge time,” says Marc Geller. “We act as if these vehicles are actually driving 24/7, as if they’re all in taxi fleets. Most people’s cars sit 22 hours a day.” During the Q&A, a member of the audience asks how policymakers plan to replace sales tax revenue lost when drivers fill up with electricity rather than gas. “These vehicles will eventually have to pay their fair share of road taxes, to be able to use the system,” says Anthony Eggert, “but the actual impact to the collection of road taxes is likely to be negligible for the next 5 plus years.“ “That would be a high-class problem, as far as I’m concerned,” responds Tesla’s O’Connell. “Let’s hope that we’ll be solving that problem within five years.” This program was recorded in front of a live audience at The Commonwealth Club on January 13, 2011 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:14.8

How will we power our future?

0:17.2

Can we create a healthy and clean economy?

0:20.1

Climate 1 at the Commonwealth Club is at the forefront of the global debate about energy, economy, and the environment. Bringing together the brightest and most provocative leaders of our time, Climate One is the place where big ideas get heard. With thoughtful and insightful discussions on policy, business, science, and culture,

0:40.9

Climate One founder Greg Dalton gets to the heart of the matter.

0:44.0

It's our future. It's time to come together.

0:47.1

Welcome to Climate One of the Commonwealth Club. I'm Greg Dalton.

0:53.2

Eight years ago, California regulators and automakers pulled the plug on the first modern electric cars.

0:56.0

This year, electric cars are rising again.

1:00.9

At the recent Detroit Auto Show, manufacturers trotted out new cars that run on electricity,

1:07.5

some or all of the time. Are electric cars ready for prime time? Or will they remain a niche product for urban elites? Will the market be driven by disruptive startups based in California

1:12.3

or auto giants in Detroit, Tokyo, and Munich? For the next hour, we'll discuss electric mobility

1:18.1

with our live audience in San Francisco and four experts. Anthony Egert is a former commissioner

1:23.7

of the California Energy Commission. Mark Geller is a co-founder of the advocacy group, Plug-In America.

1:30.6

Deermitt O'Connell is Vice President of Business Development at Tesla Motors, and Diane

1:35.0

Wittenberg is Executive Director of the California Plug-In Electrical Vehicle Collaborative.

1:41.1

Please welcome them to Climate One. Thank you all for coming. Diane, let's start with you.

1:49.8

You came out with a strategic report involved lots of people, automakers, people in electricity, environmental organizations.

1:58.1

And one of the top goals was satisfied customers, drivers of electric vehicles.

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