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New Polls Show Strong Consumer Interest in Electric Cars

By Jim Motavalli | Jul 16, 2009

Is the world ready for electric vehicles (EVs)? Yes, says a survey by Better Place, Shai Agassi’s aggressive EV-charging  station company. Of course, Better Place  has a vested interest in an affirmative response to that question, but EV interest does seem to be on the rise.

According to a poll conducted by market research firm Ipsos for Palo Alto, California-based Better Place, 30 percent of American consumers say they expect to consider an EV for their next car.

That percentage is actually higher in other countries. In addition to the U.S., Better Place surveyed consumers in Israel, Denmark, Australia and Canada (the greater Toronto area)—all countries where it plans to install charging stations. In Israel, where the company is farthest along in its wiring plans, 57 percent of respondents (1,500 to 2,500 were surveyed in each country) said they’re interested in buying an EV. Other results were similarly high: Denmark (40 percent), Australia (39 percent) and Canada (35 percent).

The poll showed that 53 percent of global respondents expect their next vehicle to be an EV, even though their options right now are pretty limited. The Tesla Roadster is the only one on the market in the U.S. (500 have been delivered), though some Chinese- and Indian-made EVs have limited runs elsewhere. 

Ellen Konar, Better Place’s director of research, has a background in studying consumer behavior for Intel, Google and IBM. She said that people with an interest in electric cars are also likely to be concerned about other social issues, including human rights, health, cost of living, air pollution and peak oil.

It seems likely that enthusiasm would wane when poll respondents are told about the limited range of battery cars, but Konar said the poll included the information that the hypothetical EV could travel only 100 miles between charges.

“The survey reflects the future of transportation, which is electric,” said Shai Agassi, Better Place’s CEO. “There’s a perfect storm of dynamics driving toward mainstream adoption of EVs.” Better Place has so far installed roughly 1,000 charging stations in the Israeli cities of Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Haifa, and plans to have 100 in place in Denmark before the start of the COP15 climate talks in December, said spokeswoman Julie Mullins.

The Better Place model includes not only battery swapping for long-distance travel, but also battery leasing. Customers would own the car, but pay a per-mile charge to lease the Better Place battery This approach gets a boost from a new University of California at Berkeley poll that indicates EV sales could jump to 86 percent of light-vehicle sales in the U.S. by 2030 “if consumers don’t have to buy batteries themselves.”

The study’s author, Thomas Becker, said it could cost $320 billion to build and install charging stations over the next 20 years.

Better Place photo

Jim Motavalli is the author of Forward Drive: The Race to Build Clean Cars for the Future, among other books. He has been covering the environmental side of the auto industry for more than a decade, and writes regularly on those topics for the New York Times.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Better Place says they need the Big Three

    Auto Blog Green - 280 days 17 hours 37 minutes ago

    Click above and scroll down to watch the video Need a quick update on Better Place? World Focus has a five-minute video that features interviews with founder Shai Agassi, video of the cars testing in Israel and skeptics like Forbes' Bruce Upbin, weighing in on the electric car startup. The clip says that Better Place promises they could...

  • Wiring Wars: The Race to Charge the World's EVs

    BNET Auto - 235 days 14 hours 24 minutes ago

    The wiring wars are getting serious. Better Place, headed by the charismatic Shai Agassi, has been making headlines around the world for signing deals to install electric vehicle (EV) recharging for, among others, Canada, Denmark, Australia, California and Hawaii. It looked for a while that Better Place would monopolize world recharging...

  • You Want Electricity With That? The Electric Car Charging Problem

    Triple Pundit - 46 days 16 hours 11 minutes ago

    As electric and plug-in hybrid cars enter mass production in the next few years, the question of where and how these cars will recharge is on the minds of many an EV entrepreneur. The EV service start-up Better Place is just one of several seeking to roll out electric charging station networks across the country that would charge to charge, so...

  • Can Better Place Withstand Gas Pains?

    Silicon Alley Insider - 287 days 21 hours 5 minutes ago

    Better Place gets another big write up today, this time courtesy of the New York Times . Better Place, as CEO Shai Agassi describes it, is like the AT&T of electric cars. Better Place provides a grid, an infrastructure for zero emission autos to exist. The company's bold dream envisions it replacing Shell stations with Better Place...

  • How Better Place's Robotic Battery Swap Stations Work

    Popular Mechanics - 15 days 5 hours 8 minutes ago

    It takes more than just a vehicle to convince consumers to adopt electric cars. Recharging their batteries has to be as easy as filling up a tank of gas. Israel-born entrepreneur Shai Agassi, the founder of the startup company Better Place, is relying on robotic quick-change stations to swap out depleted batteries for fresh ones in the electric...

 

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