An Israeli-American entrepreneur has brought in a $350 million investment to help finance his ambitious plan to lay down the world’s first electric car grid by next year, his company announced Tuesday.
Project
Better Place’s founder, 41-year-old Shai Agassi, called the HSBC move a “validating step of investing in a private company intent on bringing innovation to the trillion-dollar automotive and energy industries.” Agassi’s company is valued at $1.25 billion with the new financing.
The project’s backers say the electric car would drastically reduce oil dependence, cut carbon emissions and blaze a trail for more environmentally friendly means of transportation. But experts caution that technical pitfalls, such as a limited battery range, must be overcome before the car will be marketable.
Another sony vgp-bpl8 battery looming challenge is the huge investment needed in charging stations for the cars.
Other car manufacturers are gambling on gas-electric hybrids as the green cars of the immediate future, but the HSBC-led investment signals growing confidence in the fully electric model.
The Danish energy company DONG
The Israeli project is a joint venture between Renault-Nissan, which will provide the electric vehicles, and Agassi’s Silicon Valley-based startup
Drivers will pay a monthly subscription for the batteries, with different plans like those of cell phone users. The company says the rates will come to less than the average monthly expenditure on gasoline.
As part of the deal, HSBC’s head of global capital financing, Kevin Adeson, will join
“We are confident that Better Place has the technical and commercial solutions to allow for the mass adoption of electric cars in the near term,” Adeson said in a statement.
“The Better Place switchable battery solution, which addresses the range limitation of fixed battery electric cars, will offer the consumer an affordable and attractive alternative to current combustion engine and hybrid vehicles.”
Israel has been touted as the ideal laboratory toGW240,G1947, RN873 ,Y6142,GK479 test Agassi’s vision because of its high gasoline prices (around $6.30 a gallon), dense population centers and supportive government. Some 90 percent of Israeli car owners drive less than 45 miles per day, and the country’s major urban centers are less than 100 miles apart, making the use of dell studio 1735 battery operated cars more feasible than in countries with longer commutes.
Green cars are also particularly attractive to
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