Thursday, October 16, 2008
Financial Crisis Zaps Electric-Car Startup
Electric-car maker Tesla Motors faces tough times, including layoffs and delays.
By Kevin Bullis
Speedy electric: Tesla's Roadster, an electric car that
reaches 60 miles per hour in less than four seconds.
Credit: Tesla Motors |
Tesla Motors, a Silicon Valley startup that sells a
high-performance electric sports car, is feeling pressure from the ongoing financial
crisis. It announced on Wednesday
that it is closing an engineering facility in Michigan, laying off an
unspecified number of workers, and delaying its next vehicle, a long-anticipated
luxury sedan, while it waits on government loans to provide new funding. In
addition, Tesla's CEO is being replaced by Elon Musk, Tesla's chairman and a
leading investor, whose money nearly single-handedly got the company off the
ground. Now the company, instead of pushing full speed ahead on developing new
cars, will focus on making itself profitable by selling its sports car and
motor and battery technology.
That's bad news for people who had hoped that the company
would eventually produce an electric car they could afford. Tesla got attention
because of its sports car, a powerful car that is fun to drive and helped change the
image of electric vehicles. But the $109,000 vehicle is beyond the reach of
most people. Much of the appeal of the company has been its long-term goal of
making electric vehicles affordable. The proposed luxury sedan, with a price
tag of $60,000, would be a significant step in that direction, but the cutbacks
at the company raise questions about whether it will be able to meet its
long-term goal. Tesla's sedan was originally to have gone into production in
2009. But that's been pushed back to mid-2011 at the soonest. That's after GM
is to come out with an electric sedan of its own, the Volt, which is supposed
to cost about $40,000. And several other automakers will be launching electric
vehicles in roughly the same time frame. With a late start on a production
sedan, will Tesla be able to go toe-to-toe with the big carmakers? Will it
become "one of the great car companies of the 21st century," as Musk
hopes? Or will it, as now seems likely, remain a boutique car company, selling
specialty vehicles to the relative few?
To be sure, this isn't the first time that Tesla has seen
sharp cutbacks. The company, founded in 2003, is already on its fourth CEO. At
the beginning of this year, it reportedly laid off about 10 percent of its
workforce in what former CEO Martin Eberhard is said to have called a "bloodbath."
It's also faced delays before, particularly when it had problems with the
transmission on its sports car. And yet the company continues to plug along.
The late-coming sports car has nevertheless sold out and has a long waiting
list. And Musk, who has considerable personal financial resources, has said he
will do whatever it takes to ensure that the company will have enough capital.
It's certainly far too early to write the company off.
 Credit: Tesla Motors |
Comments
Soarhead
soarhead
10/17/2008
Posts:9
calciomadnes...
10/20/2008
Posts:1
They are betting their business on using batteries designed for personal computers. That's why they need so many of them and their recharge cycles and possible overheating are problematic.
New battery technologies are providing more efficient alternatives and are just now coming to market.
By stretching out to 2011 for delivery, they probably can give themselves some breathing room to solve this problem.
sylviechen
10/21/2008
Posts:1
boustrephon
10/22/2008
Posts:14
Quinton_O
01/15/2009
Posts:1
thomatt12
03/04/2009
Posts:17
helend22
04/03/2009
Posts:6