Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

Potential Energy


Kevin Bullis is Technology Review’s energy editor.

Recent Posts

Blog Topics

Recent Comments

  • Cheap... : I think this is so true, Electric vehicles are a great idea, but like most new advances in tech,...
  • RD : No. Cap & Trade taxes Americans for energy use and redistributes it to political supporters like...
  • RD : Those you call AGW, ARE in favor of nuclear energy. It's the Progressives who have been blocking...
  • RD : CO2 isn't the problem.  In Maryland, a new study in the International Journal of Climatology – by...
  • kstauff : The only agreement I recall us not upholding recently is the ABM treaty, for which we informed...
  • kstauff : Kevin:  You're either unaware or glossing over recent history.  The House climate bill BARELY...
  • cheadrick : Where did that 1% number come from? There have been no accurate measurements of atmospheric CO2...
  • colinnwn : "We fly planes so much that on 9/11 global temperatures dropped a large amount more than usual as...
  • wcfloyd : Is this the same climate treaty I heard about that calls for the industrialized nations to pay...
  • devassocx : I for one, welcome failure of such an ill-conceived and costly(for no reason) piece of...
Advertisement
Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Tesla Receives Key Funding for Electric Sedan

The future of the Model S depended on government loans, which have now been approved.
By Kevin Bullis

The plan at Tesla Motors has always been to go beyond its first vehicle, the $100,000 electric Roadster, to make more-affordable electric cars--a plan that had come to depend on the startup receiving a hefty loan from the government. Today, the Department of Energy announced that it has approved that loan--in the amount of $465 million. The money could allow Tesla to bring its Model S electric sedan to market, as planned, by 2011.

The company said in a statement that $100 million will be used to construct a manufacturing facility for the company's electric power train (the battery, motor, and controls), which it plans to sell to other automakers. The rest will be used to engineer and build the Model S.

The base version of the Model S will sell for about $50,000. Tesla will offer three versions of the car with different ranges: 160, 230, or 300 miles. Even the smallest battery pack will give the vehicle more range than several planned electric cars from other manufacturers. Electric vehicles from Ford, Nissan, and Coda automotive, due out in the next couple of years, will have a range of about 100 miles.

Tesla has delivered about 500 of its Roadsters so far, and the company predicts that its Roadster division will be profitable this year.

The DOE loans are part of the $25 billion Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing program, which was first signed into law in 2007 and appropriated last September. The DOE also announced today that it had approved a $5.9 billion loan for Ford, for developing advanced vehicles and retooling factories to make cars that use less gas. The DOE also approved a $1.6 billion loan for Nissan North America, which will be used to modify a factory in Smyrna, TN, to make electric vehicles and battery packs. Nissan plans to start selling an electric car in the United States next year, which will be made in Japan until the Smyrna plant is ready in 2012.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement
Technology Review November/December 2009

Current Issue

Natural Gas Changes the Energy Map
The United States has vast supplies of this cleaner fossil fuel. But how should we use it?
•  Subscribe
Save 36%
•  Table of Contents
•  MIT News
» Gift Subscription
» Digital Subscription
» Reprints, Back Issues
» Subscribe
» Table of Contents
» MIT News

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.