The new highway-capable electric car … from China
div class=image style=float:right;padding-left:8px;img alt=miles ev electric car height=225 src=http://l.yimg.com/a/feeds/us/grn/green_driving_directions/miles-electric-car-bl.jpg width=400/br /emThe Miles EV: Chinese origins. (Miles photo)/embr /br //divpThe electric car announcements are coming thick and fast. Every time I pick up the phone, it’s another EV CEO wanting an interview. Oh, the burdens I bear. /ppThe scene is starting to look like 1910, when every garage held a new horseless carriage. There were hundreds of start-ups that year — electric, gasoline, and steam — and we’re back there again (minus the steam)./ppSo here’s the skinny on the latest one. a href=http://www.milesev.com/The Miles EV/a is an interesting-looking, highway speed, all-electric sedan that is supposed to cost $45,000. A few will trickle out in 2010, apparently. Now this part is ridiculously optimistic: Miles wants to sell 20,000 by 2011. Maybe if it was $20,000, and Miles was a company with some kind of automotive track record (the company makes small low-speed electric trucks and vans)./ppBut don’t count Miles out. It’s co-chairman, Steven Heller, a href=http://www.autobloggreen.com/2009/03/31/miles-ev-names-ex-goldman-sachs-exec-as-co-chairman?icid=sphere_blogsmith_inpage_autobloggreenheaded mergers and acquisitions/a at Goldman Sachs. He could probably sell igloos to Eskimos./ppThere’s a strange evolution here. a href=http://www.autobloggreen.com/2009/05/27/new-highway-speed-miles-electric-sedan-to-be-unveiled-next-weekAccording to Autobloggreen/a, in 2007, the company announced something called the Javlon XS500 — sounds like a rocket ship, doesn’t it? That was supposed to sell for $30,000, but some price inflation seems to have come along with the name change./ppJohn O’Dell at Edmunds a href=http://blogs.edmunds.com/greencaradvisor/2009/05/miles-ev-sedan-wont-be-a-miles-company-says-as-it-prepares-for-2010-launch.htmlhad some useful details/a. The Miles EV, he says, is based on the Chinese Hafei Auto Group’s Saibao EV and will be built in China, using 30% non-Chinese components (including parts of the electric drive). Since Chinese auto quality is sometimes questionable, Miles says it has been extensively re-engineered to meet U.S. expectations. It’s supposed to have a range of 100 miles and a top speed of 80 mph with lithium-iron-phosphate batteries./ppThe new car will be unveiled June 3, at which time a new strategic partner is supposed to be announced and test drives offered at the company’s Santa Monica, California, base. Would this be the first Chinese EV on the U.S. market? Not exactly. The Wheego Whip — a neighborhood electric vehicle from the Atlanta-based company — is based on a Chinese car, the Noble./pp /ppstrongMore from The Daily Green/strong/pullia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/fuel-efficient-cars-47102201?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=blogmag=tdgThe 10 Most Fuel-Efficient Cars of 2009/a/lilia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/micro-cars-mpg-460409?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=blogmag=tdgThe Hottest New Cars Prove Small Is Beautiful/a/lilia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/green-homes/latest/electric-bikes-460209?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=blogmag=tdgElectric Bikes: The Fun, Green Way to Get Around/a/lilia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/green-homes/latest/save-money-megaflip?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=blogmag=tdg30+ Ways to Save Money by Going Green/a/lilia href=http://www.thedailygreen.com/green-homes/latest/recycling-symbols-plastics-460321?link=reldom=yah_greensrc=syncon=blogmag=tdgWhat Do Recycling Codes Mean?/a/li/ulpemReprinted with permission of Hearst Communications, Inc/em/p