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Bridgette Meinhold

Better Place Makes Electric Vehicle Grids a Reality

by , 12/10/08

better place, electric vehicle grid, sustainable transportation, better place electric vehicles, renewable energy, green design, sustainable design, electric vehicle infrastructure

Lately the Better Place electric vehicle network has been expanding at an incredible rate, with Hawaii recently signing on for an electric vehicle grid and Israel recently unveiling the first completed plug-in charging spot. We recently touched upon the company when we covered California‘s plans to become the electric vehicle capital of the US, but we wanted to go into more detail about Better Place and how their innovative electric vehicle network would work.

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8 Responses to “Better Place Makes Electric Vehicle Grids a Reality”

  1. fritter fritter says:

    Call me jaded, but all I see when I look at those “plug-in” stations is teen vandals getting a kick out of unplugging cars as they walk down the street….

  2. anna anna says:

    now it would be amazing if the electricity you used to charge the car came from renewable sources…… otherwise we’re just redirecting the problem

  3. bernice paul bernice paul says:

    I agree with Anna, I hope the source of electricity is renewable.
    Can you imagine if the Big 3 in the US were even HINTING at going this way? Would we feel a bit better about their pleas for a bailout? Thomas Friedman wrote a great post in his NY Times column yesterday about this… highly recommended complementary discussion to this post.

  4. JOAO JOAO says:

    Hi Bridgette !
    Shai Agassi also signed the same agreement for a Better Place network in Lisbon (Portugal), my home.
    Do you know if the plugs of such network will be opened for the various EV’s we expect soon in the market, or has Mr Agassi chosen a proprietary system, for example exclusive to his deal with Renault-Nissan ?
    I really hope Better Place also stands for freedom of choice.

  5. As far as I know, Better Place’s plan is not to be exclusive with car manufacturers or batteries, I think their whole goal is to get as many companies involved in order to make it universal. Every manufacturer that wants to play though will, of course, have to meet Better Place’s standards. Hopefully this is in fact how it happens, because it will encourage competition and cost reductions for the consumer.

  6. [...] Better Place is set to revolutionize the electric vehicle industry with their innovative plan for EV infrastructure — and now they’re putting their money where their mouth is by testing a brand new battery switching station in Tokyo. The first real-world facility of its kind will swap spent car batteries for fresh ones, helping to perfect the system in order to develop more efficient prototypes. Better Place is working with a pilot-program fleet of three cabs to stress test the facility, which can swap an EV’s spent battery for a full one in less than a minute! [...]

  7. [...] average range of 100 miles and it uses Renault’s Quick Drop system, which allows drivers to quickly exchange the battery instead of waiting around for it to [...]

  8. elbiler elbiler says:

    Here in Denmark we already have quite a few charge spots. By April 2012 we will have 20 battery swap stations, which will cover the entire country :)

    Best Regards

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