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View Full Version : Who Killed the Electric Car?



OneBrickOneVoice
16th August 2006, 19:38
Who killed the Electric Car is great. I saw it yesterday and thought it was really well put together. If it's playing near you than it's something worth seeing. Here's a discription.


The year is 1990. California is in a pollution crisis. Smog threatens public health. Desperate for a solution, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) targets the source of its problem: auto exhaust. Inspired by a recent announcement from General Motors about an electric vehicle prototype, the Zero Emissions Mandate (ZEV) is born. It required 2% of new vehicles sold in California to be emission-free by 1998, 10% by 2003. It is the most radical smog-fighting mandate since the catalytic converter. With a jump on the competition thanks to it speed-record-breaking electric concept car, GM launches its EV1 electric vehicle in 1996. It was a revolutionary modern car, requiring no gas, no oil changes, no mufflers, and rare brake maintenance (a billion-dollar industry unto itself). A typical maintenance checkup for the EV1 consisted of replenishing the windshield washer fluid and a tire rotation. But the fanfare surrounding the EV1's launch disappeared and the cars followed. Was it lack of consumer demand as carmakers claimed, or were other persuasive forces at work? Fast forward to 6 years later--the fleet is gone. EV charging stations dot the California landscape like tombstones, collecting dust and spider webs. How could this happen? Did anyone bother to examine the evidence? Yes, in fact, someone did. And it was murder.

Delta
16th August 2006, 20:40
Looks like it could be good. I'll see it when it comes out on DVD :)

bezdomni
17th August 2006, 04:36
I can't remember the story exactly, but my friend's uncle or something worked for a small company as an engineer in developing a hydrogen car that worked. Long story short, they developed it and it was bought out by GM almost immediately.

It is now sitting in a garage somewhere. At least that's what he said.

OneBrickOneVoice
17th August 2006, 07:03
Yeah in that movie they talk alot about hydrogen fuel cells. There are a few problems. First, a hydrogen car would now cost $1,000,000 which is insane. Also, there is no infastructure. There'd need to be tons of hydrogen refueling stations. Electric cars were very affordable compared to gas cars and there was no gas station needed. You could charge it at home and at work and it was all good.