| A few days ago, we wrote that "EVs run out of juice." When we did that, we referred to collapsing sales in January only. Now Reuters says: "Are electric cars running out of juice again?" Reuters means it in a bigger way. Like forever. In a long article, written by its best brains, Reuters writes that electric cars are "still is not ready for prime time – and may never be. In the meantime, the attention of automotive executives in Asia, Europe and North America is beginning to swing toward an unusual but promising new alternate power source: hydrogen." Both lovers and haters of electric cars should read the article, written by Reuters' star reporter Norihiko Shirouzu , Deepa Seetharaman, Bernie Woodall and their Pulitzer-Prize winning boss Paul Ingrassia. Executive summary:
Last year, Toyota's former R&D Chief and soon-to-be chairman Takeshi Uchiyamada shocked reporters with the assertion that
Slowly, colleagues at other OEMs agree. "We don't regret it yet," says Nissan's R&D Chief Mitsuhiko Yamashita of the company's multibillion-dollar gamble on EVs. "We might in a few years. No, we probably won't." If you have invested in EV technology, you can recoup it with fuel cell cars. Long-term TTAC readers will find many of these assessments in past TTAC articles. from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|
No comments:
Post a Comment