Showing posts with label MOBI.E. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MOBI.E. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Portuguese PM is the first head of government in the world to use an electric car

From the FinanzNachrichten: Portugal received delivery of the first 10 electric vehicles in Europe from Nissan as recognition of the country's pioneering work in electric mobility with the MOBI.E project.

The Prime Minister José Socrates is one of the ten recipients and will now travel exclusively by Electric Car for his official travels around the capital city. With this Portugal becomes the first country in the world to have a head of state head of government using an electric car for official matters.

Prime Minister, Jose Socrates, said:

"Portugal is extremely proud of the introduction of the electric vehicle. This initiative is only possible due the fast implementation and development of the Portuguese MOBI.E Charging Network, which is considered a leading example to the world of how to roll out electric cars. Portugal is the first country in the world to have a nation-wide smart grid for electric vehicles."

The other cars will be purchased by nine companies of the technological consortium that developed the MOBI.E solution as a clear sign of the need for a transition to Electric Mobility.

The cars were delivered Carlos Tavares, Vice-President of Nissan, in a Ceremony that occurred in Parque das Nações, in Lisbon.

Portugal Pioneer on Electric Mobility

Portugal is the first country in the world to implement an electric vehicle charging network at a national scale. The MOBI.E network, which currently spreads over 25 municipalities throughout the country, displays over 50 charging points already installed growing to more than 1300 normal charging points and 50 quick charging stations by mid-2011.

It is the only truly integrated system in the world, focusing on the user and ensuring open-access and interoperability. Such approach has drawn interest from many countries to the MOBI.E Programme.

The MOBI.E charging network is thus the first electric mobility smart grid and has established itself as a world industry benchmark.

Portugal has therefore become the definite living lab for electric mobility, and is well on its way for a more sustainable oil-independent future.

Read more...
READ MORE - Portuguese PM is the first head of government in the world to use an electric car

Monday, December 27, 2010

VIDEO: Renault Fluence ZE electric sedan to cost 22,000 euros in Portugal

Renault has revealed the estimated prices for the three electric models the French carmaker will launch in Portugal in 2011. According to Turbo, the Fluence ZE electric sedan will cost 22,000 euros, plus an 80 euros monthly fee for the electric battery. The price reflects a 5,000 euros discount by the Portuguese state, being awarded to the first 5,000 electric vehicle owners.

The Kangoo ZE will cost 24,000, plus a 90 euros monthly fee. The commercial vehicle is not eligible for the passenger car-only state grant.

The three-seater Renault Twizy, expected to debut in late 2011, will cost around 16,000 euros, about 2,000 less than the Zoe, the french carmaker estimates.

Portugal has a nationwide EV charging network. There are currently over one hundred plug-in stations across the territory, and the number will increase to 1.300 until June 2011. Mobi.e's network is the world's only user-focused, inter-operable smart grid to date open to every manufacturer, utility company and private operator, the project's website states.

READ MORE - VIDEO: Renault Fluence ZE electric sedan to cost 22,000 euros in Portugal

VIDEO: Renault Fluence ZE e Kangoo ZE a partir de 22.000 euros em Portugal


A Renault divulgou os preços estimados para os veículos eléctricos que a marca francesa vai comercializar a partir de 2011 em Portugal. Segundo a Turbo, o Fluence ZE, familiar de quatro portas, chega ao mercado a partir dos 22 mil euros. O valor inclui o desconto de 5 mil euros concedido pelo Estado aos primeiros 5 mil proprietários de veículos eléctricos em Portugal. Ao preço junta-se uma mensalidade de 80 euros pelo aluguer da bateria de iões de lítio.

O comercial eléctrico Kangoo ZE será comercializado com um preço-base de 24 mil euros. Os compradores deste veículo não terão direito ao desconto de 5 mil euros, uma vez que este apenas abrange ligeiros de passageiros. A mensalidade do aluguer da bateria do Kangoo eléctrico é 10 euros mais elevada que a do Fluence ZE: 90 euros.

O mini-eléctrico de três lugares Renault Twizy, que deverá chegar ao mercado no final de 2011, tem um preço estimado de 16 mil euros. Já o futuro Zoe ficará por 18 mil euros.

Para além dos incentivos estatais à compra de veículos eléctricos, Portugal conta já com uma rede de abastecimento para estes automóveis. A rede Mobi.e é actualmente composta por cerca de uma centena de postos de recarregamento, número que deverá aumentar para 1300 até Junho de 2011.

READ MORE - VIDEO: Renault Fluence ZE e Kangoo ZE a partir de 22.000 euros em Portugal

Friday, December 24, 2010

Deutsche Welle: Rise of electric cars prompt 'smart' electrical grids in Portugal

From DW World: Portugal’s long-term target of 750,000 electric cars fits with its smart energy plans. Already, the country has 40 percent of its energy coming from renewable sources.

The launch in Portugal in January of Nissan's Leaf marks the start of the rollout in Europe of what the company says is the first 100 percent electric car aimed at a mass market. Nissan targeted Portugal - where it will also soon be assembling batteries for the Leaf - after that country's government agreed to setting up a national network of charging points.

In fact, the network is to be compatible with any make of electric car, and is part of still more ambitious long-term plans for a genuinely "smart grid" that could help Portugal make fuller use of its fast-expanding renewable energy capacity.

In early December, amid ultra-modern architecture at the former site of the Expo 98 World Fair in Lisbon, members of the Portuguese public got the chance to test drive the Leaf.

Portuguese consumers are curious about electric cars

Comments ranged from the polite to the enthusiastic, with the lack of engine noise the most obvious characteristic of what at first glance looks like a regular five-seater family run-around. But the very lack of engine noise creates some new "problems."

"For instance, the headlamps have a specific design to avoid air going to the mirrors," said António Joaquim, the communications director of Nissan Iberia Portugal.

"The exterior mirrors on a normal car produce a lot of noise with the wind. But on this car, which doesn't make any noise from the engine, all the very small noises that on other cars are not perceptible are - let's say, uncomfortable."

The more obvious matter of charging the car seems straightforward: a small panel on the bonnet opens to reveal something rather similar to an ordinary electric plug.

"If you want to charge when you are parking inside a garage in your own house or in a shopping centre, it's better to have it on the bonnet," Joaquim added. "It's a completely different usage from a combustion engine. You just charge the car during your daily life."

Charging stations are scarce for now, but are expected to increase

There are two charging options: a partial quick charge, for example when you are on the motorway and do not want to stop for long, or a cheaper slow charge of up to eight hours.

Prospective buyers in Lisbon seemed to take the limitations of electric cars on board.

"It's a nice car, and a good prospect for someone like me who has an urban life, and drives about 30 or 40 kilometres to work and back," said one man, who declined to give his name.

The innovative design of the Leaf's lithium batteries means that you can drive the car for longer.

But even a fully-charged Leaf has a more limited range than a car with a full fuel tank. So the fact that it recently was named European Car of the Year - the first completely electric vehicle to do so - raised some eyebrows.

António Pereira, editor of Portuguese car magazine AutoMotor, told Deutsche Welle he suspected the competition's jury may have been anxious not to miss a trick, having previously failed to garland the first version of the Toyota Prius, which later became a hit.

The Nissan Leaf is, he said, an interesting experiment, and Portugal a suitably small testing ground, but with some problems.

"Recharging stations are still few [in number] and mainly in the big cities," he said.

"And in Portugal we mainly live in apartments. So either you have a parking space in your building or you have to recharge at night in the public recharging station. That's complicated because there won't be one for each."

Portugal pushing for dynmaic energy flow in its 'smart grid'

Still, the spread of on-street charging points in Portugal is the reason the Leaf is getting its European launch in the country.

The government-led Mobi.E consortium is installing 1,300 chargers around the country, compatible with all makes of car. In addition, the state is offering a 5,000 euro ($6,500) subsidy for buyers of electric cars - bringing the Leaf's price down to 30,000 euro - and a road-tax exemption.

Portugal's ambitious declared long-term target of 750,000 electric vehicles on its roads also fits with plans to expand its renewable energy output, going some way to addressing sceptics' argument that electric cars' environmental impact depends on where their power comes from.

"We have defined as a target to be the first country to have a nationwide and comprehensive infrastructure for vehicles and to work to give the necessary framework and incentives so that we can massively introduce the electric vehicle," Luís Reis of Mobi.E explained at a trade fair earlier this year.

"This is important not only in terms of the sustainability of mobility but also in terms of the strategy that we have for energy."

Read more...




READ MORE - Deutsche Welle: Rise of electric cars prompt 'smart' electrical grids in Portugal

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Portugal PM tells electric vehicles will free us from oil addiction, drives off in a Nissan Leaf

The Portuguese Prime-Minister José Sócrates said this Wednesday that electric vehicles will free his country and many other from oil addiction, as he got one of the first ten Nissan Leafs delivered in Europe.

‘They don’t make any noise, they have zero emissions and they’ll free our nations from oil addiction’, said the Prime-Minister. ‘These are the three reasons why I’ve always wanted to put Portugal in the forefront of the electric car, a vehicle that will change our cities and Europe’s transportation networks’, he added.

Mr. Sócrates also pointed that only with serious incentives European governments can promote public acceptance of the electric vehicle. ‘It shouldn’t be a thing just for three huggers’, the Prime-Minister joked.

The Leaf is going on sale in Portugal in 2011 with an estimated price of 30,000 euros, tax discount and state incentives included.

In the same ceremony, in Lisbon, Nissan’s vice-president Carlos Tavares told the media that ‘electric vehicles are vital for the future of the auto industry’, as well as ‘one of the answers to climate change’.

At the end of the ceremony, the Portuguese Prime-Minister drove off in the Government’s Nissan Leaf, one of the ten first such models being delivered in Europe.

The other nine Leafs were bought by the consortium behind Mobi.e, Portugal’s national electric mobility program. The Mobi.e concept has already been exported to Malta and Portugal is in talks with several other countries to implement its mobility project abroad.




READ MORE - Portugal PM tells electric vehicles will free us from oil addiction, drives off in a Nissan Leaf

Nissan delivers first ten Leafs in Portugal

Nissan is delivering this Wednesday in Lisbon the first ten Leafs in Portugal. Nine electric vehicles will be delivered to the consortium behind the national mobility program, the Mobi.e, formed by companies like Siemens, EDP, Critical Software, Efacec and Martifer, among others. The Portuguese Government will also get a Nissan Leaf to be used by the Prime-Minister José Sócrates on official acts. Sócrates is attending the cerimony.

Renault-Nissan is not an official partner listed by Mobi.e, also run by Novabase, INTELI, Rener Living Lab, CEIIA and Remobi, but is working with the Portuguese consortium on the development of a nationwide mobility network. Some 1.300 plug-in charging stations are expected to go online in Portugal until June 2011. The country has been chosen both by Renault and Nissan for extensive experimentation with electric vehicles over the last years.

The Mobi.e mobility concept has already been exported to Malta and Portugal is in talks with other countries to develop mobility networks based on the Portuguese, open model of business, national EV project.




READ MORE - Nissan delivers first ten Leafs in Portugal

Nissan entrega os primeiros dez Leafs em Portugal

A Nissan entrega esta quarta-feira os primeiros Leafs em Portugal. Dez carros eléctricos são hoje entregues em Lisboa às empresas do consórcio Mobi.e, responsável pelo programa nacional de mobilidade eléctrica. Siemens, Efacec e EDP são algumas das empresas que recebem o novo veículo eléctrico. Também o Governo de Portugal terá um Leaf para utilização do primeiro-ministro José Sócrates em actos oficiais.

A Renault-Nissan, não sendo um parceiro oficial do Mobi.e, colabora com o projecto português, tendo testado os seus modelos naquele país ao longo dos últimos anos.

O projecto Mobi.e foi recentemente exportado para Malta e Portugal está em conversações com outras nações para a implementação de soluções baseadas no conceito português de mobilidade eléctrica, que se destaca por um modelo de negócio aberto à participação de diferentes empresas e fornecedores. Até Junho de 2011, Portugal terá cerca de 1.300 pontos de recarregamento a funcionar em todo o país.

O Governo de Portugal oferece incentivos fiscais na compra de veículos eléctricos, sendo a dinamização da rede de mobilidade um dos objectivos inscritos no Orçamento do Estado para 2011, recentemente aprovado.

Fonte: JN




READ MORE - Nissan entrega os primeiros dez Leafs em Portugal

Sunday, December 19, 2010

High school kids win prize with electric roller blades project

Laziness is the mother of all invention. A teenager's reluctance to walk to school every morning has earned three kids from Vila Nova de Gaia, Portugal, the DESAFIO.E award.

David Brandão, João Nogueira and Pedro Teixeira won a trip to Nissan's Design Centre in London for their electric roller blades concept. The Skeelz have an estimated autonomy of 20 to 30 kms and are powered by a small electric battery located in a backpack. The product is to be patented soon, Mobi.e's website announced.

The DESAFIO.E award is given by Porto's CEIIA (Centre for Excellence and Innovation in the Automotive Industry) to the most innovative high school project involving electric mobility in Portugal.
READ MORE - High school kids win prize with electric roller blades project

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Better Place's answer to range anxiety? 60 seconds battery swaps

It's the biggest fear for any EV driver. Where and when are you going to find a plug-in charging station? Whereas in countries like Portugal mobility networks are moving fast towards ubiquity with projects like Mobi.e, most nations are still far from it, with just a handful of charging stations in a few cities, with the most unusual service schedules (take San Francisco, for instance).

More than an electric vehicle's relatively high price, it's the lack of a comprehensive charging infrastructure, especially when gas stations are everywhere, that keeps many consumers from buying a Nissan Leaf or a Chevrolet Volt right now. It shouldn't be a problem if you have your own charging device at home. But it is. Today's electric vehicles get between 30 to 150 kms with a full battery. When it runs out, it can take up to four hours to fully recharge it. That means that going away for the weekend with your EV is still out of question, unless you don't mind stopping every other town for several hours.

This is why Better Place presents quite an interesting solution. Instead of plug-in stations, the California based company offers a network of battery switch stations that use a robotic system to switch depleted batteries for fully-charged ones, and charge the depleted batteries in inventory, so that there's a fully-charged battery ready to be installed, in a matter of seconds (60 second switches have been accomplished in tests) each time the vehicle arrives at a station. Kinda like changing your son's toy's AA battery, instead of recharging it every time it runs out.

The concept is already in practice in Israel, Denmark and Australia, though on a limited test basis. The US, Japan and China are the next targets for Better Place's internationalization strategy.

Sure, there are doubts about the practicability of this idea in the long run. Will everyone abdicate of being the owner of their own car's battery? What are the legal implications of that when, say, someone crashes their car and loses a battery? Will Better Place's closed model of business keep companies from developing better batteries with longer lives? And if and when they do develop them, what's the point of such a battery swap system? The German reflection group on mobility has said no to battery swaps, just as Volkswagen did. What does that mean for Better Place? Anyway, it is a brilliant idea, at least on paper, and it could well be a practical solution in these first years of the EV revolution.
READ MORE - Better Place's answer to range anxiety? 60 seconds battery swaps

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Malta adopts Portugal's Mobi.e mobility solution

The governments of Portugal and Malta have signed an agreement this Wednesday for the implementation of the Mobi.e mobility network solution in the Mediterranean archipelago. Lisbon will provide Malta with technical solutions as well as legislative and fiscal advisory based on the Portuguese experience with Mobi.e.

Portugal is the first country in the world to implement a nationwide EV charging network. There are currently over one hundred plug-in stations across the territory, and the number will increase to 1.300 until June 2011. Mobi.e's network is the world's only user-focused, inter-operable smart grid to date open to every manufacturer, utility company and private operator, the project website states.

Malta will be the first European Union state to import the Portuguese mobility solution.
READ MORE - Malta adopts Portugal's Mobi.e mobility solution

Monday, December 13, 2010

Portugal starts production of the Mobicar

Portugal's 100% electric Mobicar (no relation to this blog's name) will start to be assembled in 2011 and will roll out on to the steets in 2012, with local media reporting a final tag price of 9.000 euros (12.000 dollars), yet to be confirmed.

With an autonomy of 120 km (74 miles) and a top speed of 100 kmph (62 mph), the three-seater compact vehicle is being developed at the CEIIA (Centre for Excellence and Innovation in the Automotive Industry) in Porto, in collaboration with Spain's CTAG, among 70 other entities, companies and universities. Initial production is limited to 350 test units. For 2012, 6250 Mobicars are expected to roll out the Vendas Novas Isuzu plant.

Portugal already has over 100 charging stations and will get a further 1200 plug-in stations until December 2011, in a project led by Mobi.e. The network, with an open business model, allows any consumer the access to any provider of electricity in any charging point explored by any service operator. The country exempts EVs from most taxes.
READ MORE - Portugal starts production of the Mobicar

Friday, December 10, 2010

Barack Obama tries the new Opel Ampera / Chevrolet Volt

Anyone noticed the President of the United States sitting inside the new Ampera / Volt? It happened during NATO's summit in Lisbon. Click on the image for more at MOBI.E's website:
READ MORE - Barack Obama tries the new Opel Ampera / Chevrolet Volt

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