Wednesday, December 2, 2009

California Builds An Electric Vehicle Infrastructure


Nissan Leaf Five-Seat, Zero-Emission Hatchback made its USA debut on November 13, 2009 at Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California. The Leaf will offered in markets in the USA and Europe in 2010, and will be available on the global market in 2012. The Leaf will run on a lithium-ion battery and have a 100-mile range after charging.

California Installs Thousands Of Electric Vehicle Charging Stations

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa on December 1, 2009 announced an electric vehicle infrastructure plan for the city. Together with partners, Los Angeles plans to update 400 electrical charging stations an add 100 more. Partners in the plan include Southern California Edison Co., the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, Nissan Motor Co., General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and the cities of Burbank, Pasadena, Santa Ana and Santa Monica.

The electric vehicle charging stations are the foundation for an infrastructure being constructed to meet the demands of a large influx of electric vehicles as early as 2010. At least ten automobile manufacturers will be offering electric cars for the USA mass market within the next one to three years.

SolarCity Corp. of Foster City, CA announced on September 22, 2009 that it had finished construction of five solar-powered electric vehicle charging stations along U.S. Highway 101 between Los Angeles and San Francisco, CA. This program is in collaboration with Rabobank which is hosting charging stations at its offices in Salinas, Atascadero, Santa Maria, and Goleta, California. The fifth electric vehicle charging station in the project is on city land in San Luis Obispo, CA.

SolarCity has built about 100 Tesla Motors Inc. electric vehicle charging stations at individual residences, and to date has installed a total of about 2,500 charging stations statewide in California.


Electric Charger Device and Nissan Leaf Electric Vehicle

The Los Angeles Times reported the following on the Nissan Leaf debut in Los Angeles on November 13, 2009:

"Chargers inside customers' home garages will be the primary method of powering up the cars, but Nissan has been planning a network of Leaf charging stations with public and private partners.

So far, Nissan has cut 33 deals around the world, with stations set for San Diego; Sonoma County; Portland, Ore.; Seattle; Tucson; Phoenix; Washington, D.C.; Raleigh, N.C.; and in Tennessee.

On Friday, (November 13, 2009) Nissan announced an agreement to develop a charging infrastructure in Texas with Houston-based Reliant Energy, a subsidiary of electricity giant NRG Energy Inc. The deal could involve Reliant home charging packages offered through Nissan, said NRG Chief Executive David Crane.

The Leaf battery, which can be quick-charged to 80% capacity in 30 minutes at special charging stations or fully charged overnight using a 220-volt socket, will be leased separately at a rate that Nissan Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn said would be less than the cost of gasoline."