About Auto Industry

Everyone has their eyes on the automotive industry lately. BNET Automotive gathers and supplies daily industry trends and news coverage with specific insights for managers and executives, focusing on the major auto companies and parts manufacturers. In addition to detailed auto company trends and profiles, we report on new alliances and partnerships, new models, mergers and acquisitions, labor management, auto unions, investments, and other key issues related to this sector of business.

Starting an EV Company with 10 People, $5 Million and Chinese Suppliers

By Jim Motavalli | Jul 30, 2009

Can you start an EV company with 10 people and $5 million in private investor funding? Dan Russo thinks so. The 30-year veteran of auto suppliers has done just that as CEO of Green Go Tek, based in Milford, Michigan. It doesn’t quite operate out of a garage, but its headquarters is 3,300 square feet, and its tech center, where pilot testing is done, is 7,500 square feet. It would fit into a back alley of GM’s Tech Center.

Several of the GGT people are refugees from the defunct American Electric Vehicle Company, which produced the Kurrent a few years ago, before consumers were ready for EVs.

But GGT also has outposts in China, Italy and Mexico, and it leverages the outstanding array of Michigan-based auto talent turned loose by the recession. “We are blessed with having any kind of resource we need on the outside,” Russo said. “We outsource a lot of the engineering and manufacturing, and due to the downturn there are many capable small industries and individuals within 100 miles.”

Despite its tiny size, GGT wants to be a “full-line” car company, and, although it has only been in business since September, is indeed fielding a varied product line, including small cars, work trucks, minivans and more. The catch here—and there had to be one—is that many of the company vehicles are low-speed vehicles (LSVs), meaning not only that they’re speed-limited to 25 mph but that they can escape many of the expensive and onerous federal testing that highway-capable vehicles go through.

The tiny 1,100-pound Cozmo has three doors, two seats and a 65-mile range, Russo said. Like many emerging EVs, its body is built in China (suppliers include LBC, Wuling and others) and shipped to the U.S., where the electric drivetrain is installed. “We have an office and design studio in Shanghai, so we can control quality at the source,” Russo said. You can’t take the Cozmo on the highway, but prices begin at $17,900 (plus $2,500 if you want air).

The company also has the E-Dyne, which comes in both mini-truck and minivan versions. “The bed is larger than the Ford F-150,” Russo boasts. Some larger trucks are also available, as well as 9-18-passenger transporters sold to resorts in the U.S. and the Caribbean.

A lucrative market for GGT is electric conversions of highway-capable commercial vehicles, including so far a Dodge Dakota, Ford Transit and Chevy Colorado (how did the Mini Cooper get in there)? Russo says he’s had interest in fleet conversions from several cities, including New York, Chicago and Pasadena. Since hanging out its shingle on July 15, the company has taken orders for 20 Cozmos, 39 trucks and, from Puerto Rico, six of the resort-oriented people transporters. It’s a start.

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:
  • Report: Appleâ??s Fifth Avenue store tops $350M in annual revenue (Updated)

    ZDNet - 89 days 23 hours 2 minutes ago

    Bloomberg notes that that’s the equivalent of selling one Mercedes-Benz C300 sedan per square foot. Jeffrey Roseman of real-estate broker Newmark Knight Frank Retail in New York estimates that Apple’s Fifth Avenue store has about $350 million in annual revenue — the highest of Apple’s 262 retail stores. The store is 10,000 square feet...

  • Nissanâ??s EV: The Leaf Shows its Colors

    BNET Auto - 111 days 1 hour 48 minutes ago

    Its called the Leaf. As we know from high school science, leaves clean the air by filtering carbon dioxide. The Nissan Leaf doesnt do that, but it can claim zero emissions and no tailpipe. Nissan unveiled its new battery electric vehicle over the weekend in Yokohama, Japan, with former EV skeptic (and Renault-Nissan Alliance CEO)...

  • Online Shoppers Want Human Helping Hand

    eMarketer Today - 82 days 11 hours 12 minutes ago

    Impersonal e-commerce doesnâ??t always cut it

  • State officials ask feds for up to $2B to boost suppliers

    The Detroit News - 101 days 19 hours 1 minute ago

    Washington -- Michigan officials privately warned the White House recently that the auto supplier sector is in danger of collapse, and equipment could be purchased by foreign firms to build parts abroad. In an 18-page presentation July 29, the Michigan Economic Development Corp. said "40 to 50 percent of automotive suppliers face bankruptcy in...

  • Dear Jim Letters: The Electric-Car Future

    BNET Auto - 152 days 20 hours 5 minutes ago

    The two Jims have been friends for 20 years, but that doesnt mean they agree on everything: Jim Motavalli thinks that environmental factors loom large and the EV revolution is right around the corner; Jim Henry thinks the inherent conservatism of American consumers will keep it a niche market for a long time to come. Heres what...

Links from the Web Buzz:
 
Reply to Story

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Subscribe to this discussion via Email or RSS

  •  
    1

    vdmdfan

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Starting an EV Company with 10 People, $5 Million and Chinese Suppliers

    I wouldn't call converting cars a 'lucrative market'. It's what toyota was doing in the 90s with the RAV4-EV, and it's an intelligent market- people want electric cars that aren't $100K+ roadsters, and also aren't funny looking small vehicles. Electric cars are fast, efficient, safe, smart, clean. I'm excited to see small companies take the initiative- the big three have dropped the ball so hard on electric vehicles (If you don't know, check out what happened to the Ford EV1). There's a large number of people who know that electric cars are the way to go- and are waiting for an affordable and well-built model to purchase. If small companies are realizing that, and filling that consumer market, than that's great. If anyone wants to learn more about electric cars, I suggest the website http://www.twocentspermile.com which has some great information.

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement