Continental’s Vision for Seamless Mobility Combines Autonomous Shuttles and Delivery Robots

At CES 2019, Continental will demonstrate a seamless approach to goods delivery with the help of delivery robots and driverless vehicles This holistic delivery concept increases availability, efficiency and safety in the goods and parcel delivery value chain The need for automated delivery is projected to increase due to the rise in global e-commerce and… Continue reading Continental’s Vision for Seamless Mobility Combines Autonomous Shuttles and Delivery Robots

Uber’s IPO may not be as eye-popping as we expected

Uber is expected to raise $10 billion later this year in one of the largest U.S. initial public offerings in history. The float will value the ride-hailing giant somewhere between $76 billion — the valuation it garnered with its last private financing — and $120 billion — a sky-high figure assigned by Wall Street bankers… Continue reading Uber’s IPO may not be as eye-popping as we expected

PAVE coalition launches broad-based public education campaign on automated vehicles

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With cease-fire agreement, spark flickers toward Faraday’s Future

Faraday Future FF91 prototype
Like a prizefighter listening to counts of “eight” and “nine,” Chinese electric-car startup Faraday Future, has started groaning, sputtering, and trying to stand.

The company, which sputtered to a start building prototype electric luxury cars last year, then was abruptly knocked out when its new Chinese financial backer withheld funds in a contract dispute, has reached a new agreement with its benefactor, with each side agreeing to retire lawsuits against each other, and Faraday receiving the green light to seek new investment.

The company controls a leased factory in California and has several prototype vehicles, but furloughed most of its staff last year after it ran out of money in a power-control plot that looked cut from the script of a cheesy wrestling show.

READ THIS: Faraday Future loses final founding executive (Updated)

Along with that staff went all five of the company's founding executives, including Peter Savagian, a member of the original GM EV1 team, and Dag Reckhorn, the former head of Model S manufacturing at Tesla. The only founder left is the company's original financial backer, Jia Yueting, a collegial fellow known with affection within the company's ranks, but who sits at the center of many of its controversies.

In November, Faraday received permission from a Hong Kong court to seek up to $500 million in new investment as it worked to settle its differences with its primary backer, Evergrande Health group, a health insurance company in Hong Kong.

Evergrande agreed last June to invest up to $2 billion in Faraday Future, and the company went on a hiring spree and produced several prototypes at its new factory. In October, Evergrande announced it would withhold future payments on the funds after Faraday failed to meet certain contractual milestones.

CHECK OUT: Faraday Future sues investor claiming takeover “plot”

Faraday Future accused Evergrande of trying to bankrupt the company to steal its patents.

In the latest settlement, Evergrande and Faraday Future have agreed to drop those lawsuits and stop fighting for now, while Faraday seeks new funding.

What is less clear is where any new funding might come from for a company with a few roughly assembled prototypes and a leased factory, but no experienced executives to run it. Many of the furloughed factory workers may well still wish to come back to Faraday, but many others will have to be replaced by new workers who would have to be trained from scratch.

Which company will sell the first personal-use electric pickup? Take our Twitter poll

Rivian R1T electric pickup concept
If electric cars are going to take over from internal combustion machines, they will need to be offered in the most popular types of vehicles—and that means pickups.

Electric-car fans seem to be clamoring for electric pickups, and some startup automakers—along with Tesla—are starting to respond.

READ THIS: Rivian R1T all-electric pickup revealed: 400-mile range, 160-kw DC fast charging

At November's LA auto show, Michigan-based startup Rivian showed a concept version of its R1T electric pickup, which it says it plans to sell starting in 2021.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said the company plans to design an electric pickup to follow its Model Y SUV, which was originally scheduled to go on sale in 2019. With production of the Model 3 just getting into full swing, though the company hasn't mentioned a start date for the Model Y recently.

Bollinger B2

Ford has confirmed it plans to build a hybrid version of its F-150 starting in 2020, and, speaking in October at the 100th anniversary of Ford's giant Rouge factory, chairman Bill Ford hinted that the company will eventually build an all-electric F-150 “when the time comes.”

CHECK OUT: Bollinger Motors announces B2 electric pickup alongside SUV

New York startup Bollinger Motors, which has shown a concept version of a heavy-duty SUV it plans to build, also showed a pickup design in October. Like Bollinger's SUVs, it would be a heavy-duty pickup, likely a one-ton, so heavier than most personal-use pickups, but designed more for off-roaders, hunters, or campers, rather than contractors. The company did not release a timeline.

With all these electric pickups in the works, we thought we'd ask our followers which one they think might arrive on the market first. Our official Twitter poll this week asks: “Which company will sell the first personal-use electric pickup?”

Those are the choices: Rivian, Tesla, Ford, or Bollinger.

Click on over to the poll to let us know which electric pickup you're most optimistic about. And remember that our Twitter polls are unscientific, because of low sample size and because our respondents are self-selected.

Tesla factory and screen interface, Byton back at CES: Today’s Car News

Byton M-Byte concept
Patent filings show new features that may be coming to updated Model S and Model X cars later this year. Chinese startup automaker Byton makes another appearance at CES. And our latest Twitter poll asks readers which electric pickup they think may hit the roads first. All this and more on Green Car Reports.

On Sunday night, Musk took to Twitter to announce that the company would break ground on its much-needed second factory on Monday. The new plant in China will produce “affordable” Model 3s and Model Ys for the Chinese and surrounding markets.

A patent filing late last year shows a new Windows-like control interface that may be coming to updated Model S and Model X cars later this year. The screen will allow drivers to see four functions at once.

Chinese startup automaker Byton will make its second appearance at the CES show in Las Vegas this week, after giving rides in its M-byte SUV last year. This year, an updated M-byte that's closer to production will have a curved screen across the dashboard, more screens for rear passengers, and even a few actual buttons for driver controls.

If 2019 is the year of the electric SUV, it's also the year of electric pickup concept announcements. Our latest Twitter poll asks readers which company they think will get an electric pickup on the market first: Rivian, Tesla, Ford, or Bollinger.

A spy photographer in Germany caught photos of the upcoming BMW iX3, due out in 2020, testing on public roads. Lest there be any doubt that it was the electric version of the X3, the test car had signs emblazoned on the front doors proclaiming, “Electric Test Vehicle.”

Finally, Jay Leno got a chance to test drive the new Mercedes-Benz EQC 400 prototype and released a new video on “Jay Leno's Garage” to rave about the experience.

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