Fiat Chrysler CEO Eyes Peugeot’s Electric Car Platform

A Fiat based on a little electric Peugeot makes for an interesting proposition With its electric vehicle push only just beginning to take shape, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles could be looking to other automakers to help it catch up as tougher emissions regulations start to take hold.  FCA CEO Mike Manley said Friday in an investors… Continue reading Fiat Chrysler CEO Eyes Peugeot’s Electric Car Platform

Lyft Says It’s ‘Not in the Transportation Business,’ So Disability Law Doesn’t Apply – Gizmodo

Photo: Mario Tama (Getty) We’re in the season of multi-billion-dollar rideshare IPOs where the spotlight is on global and unprofitable transportation companies like Lyft and Uber as they try to get into the black. Let’s check in with how the process is unfolding. Excuse me, I’m sorry, my notes here say that actually, Lyft is… Continue reading Lyft Says It’s ‘Not in the Transportation Business,’ So Disability Law Doesn’t Apply – Gizmodo

Lyft and Ground Up PDX introduce Cashew Chai

This spring, Lyft has teamed up with Ground Up PDX, a Portland company that employs women overcoming adversity, to debut the customized nut butter flavor, Cashew Chai — a flavor imagined by Lyft driver and aspiring teacher Melanie H. With each jar sold, Lyft will donate a ride to nonprofit Outside In to help a… Continue reading Lyft and Ground Up PDX introduce Cashew Chai

Liam O’Connor, hired to help build Lyft’s bike and scooter business, has left after 7 months

The emerging business of offering bikes and scooters on demand has not always been very smooth, and today comes one of the latest bumps: TechCrunch has learned and confirmed that Liam O’Connor, an executive hired to help transportation company Lyft build its bike and scooter operations, has left after seven months with the newly-public company.… Continue reading Liam O’Connor, hired to help build Lyft’s bike and scooter business, has left after 7 months

UPDATE 3-U.S. rejects Tesla bid for tariff exemption for Model 3 ‘brain’

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. trade officials rejected Tesla Inc’s bid for relief from President Donald Trump’s 25 percent tariffs on the Chinese-made computer “brain” of its Model 3 electric vehicles, one of more than 1,000 product denials linked to China’s industrial development plans. FILE PHOTO: A 2018 Tesla Model 3 electric vehicle is shown in… Continue reading UPDATE 3-U.S. rejects Tesla bid for tariff exemption for Model 3 ‘brain’

U.S. rejects Tesla bid for tariff exemption for Model 3 ‘brain’

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. trade officials rejected Tesla Inc’s bid for relief from President Donald Trump’s 25 percent tariffs on the Chinese-made computer “brain” of its Model 3 electric vehicles, one of more than 1,000 product denials linked to China’s industrial development plans. FILE PHOTO: A 2018 Tesla Model 3 electric vehicle is shown in… Continue reading U.S. rejects Tesla bid for tariff exemption for Model 3 ‘brain’

Fiat Chrysler shares soar after CEO hints at tie-ups

Sales by the company which makes Fiat, Chrysler, Jeep, Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Dodge and Ram vehicles, slid 4.8 percent to 24.5 billion euros. Milan: Fiat Chrysler (FCA) reported falling profits on Friday, but its share price soared after its CEO indicated that the Italian-US group would have an “active and constructive role” in consolidating the… Continue reading Fiat Chrysler shares soar after CEO hints at tie-ups

GM joins Tesla, Ford in building EV pickups — but Texas ranchers don’t want a ‘playboy’s truck’

Rivian EV Pickup Truck.Adam Jeffery | CNBCGeneral Motors, the nation's largest automaker, is joining Ford, Tesla and start-up Rivian in adding an all-electric pickup to its portfolio.
But Detroit's Big Three and their challengers may have a hard time persuading the ranchers, roughnecks and handymen who make up a lot of their core clientele to trade in their diesel duallys for a battery-powered 4X4 pickup.
Arguably, the most critical question, said Sam Abuelsamid, a senior automotive tech analyst with Navigant Research, is “whether there's a market for an all-electric truck.”
GM CEO Mary Barra didn't offer any details about the pickup, but said GM “will not cede our leadership” in the pickup segment, leading to widespread speculation about what GM is developing and when it will come to market.
Slow to catch onConsidering the heavy use that many buyers subject their pickups to, that's no easy question.
Electric vehicles, in general, have been slow to catch on with American car buyers. While sales of all plug-based vehicles — including all-electric and plug-in hybrid models — jumped from 195,226 in 2017 to 360,353 last year, according to industry data, that was still less than 2% of the overall new vehicle market. And pure battery-electric vehicles alone generated barely half of that total.
The vast bulk of the market is currently made up of a single vehicle, the Tesla Model 3 sedan. But manufacturers hope to spur growth with the addition of new products as diverse as the Audi e-tron SUV, the Porsche Taycan sports car and the Jaguar I-Pace crossover that was named World Car of the Year at the New York International Auto Show last month.
Tesla pickupNow, manufacturers want to add all-electric pickups to the option list. Tesla has been hinting at its plans for a truck for several years, and CEO Elon Musk is promising to reveal more in the coming months. Detroit-based Rivian got a leg up on Tesla and other competitors by unveiling its own battery model, the R1T, at the Los Angeles auto show last November. Ford, which is investing $500 million in Rivian, has confirmed it is working up what is expected to be an all-electric version of its best-selling F-150.
Abuelsamid is one of those speculating about what GM might have in store. While a battery-based version of the big Chevrolet Silverado seems likely, he said the automaker could deliver a surprise. By opting for a midsize model, along the lines of the smaller Chevy Colorado, said Abuelsamid, it “would give them a chance to have a unique product in the market because everyone is focusing on full-size trucks.”
What is all but certain, however, is that GM — and Ford and Tesla, for that matter — will have to echo Rivian's lead, delivering a vehicle that boasts plenty of horsepower and stump-pulling torque with great range and significant levels of towing and cargo capacity. The start-up's R1T will make “close to” 800 horsepower, CEO RJ Scaringe said in Los Angeles, enough to hit 60 mph in 3 seconds. Its roughly 1,000 pound-feet of torque will let it haul a trailer of up to 11,000 pounds, and it is expected to get up to 400 miles on a 180 kilowatt-hour battery pack.
Rivian R1T electric pickup truckSource: Rivian'Playboy's truck'Those are the sort of numbers that would seem to play well with classic pickup users such as rancher Frank Helvey, who raises cattle and is active in the livestock auction community near Pearsall, Texas.
“I wouldn't buy one at all. It wouldn't make sense for me. It sounds like a playboy's truck, instead of a work truck,” he said in an interview.
In Texas, where everything is bigger, the truck market is no exception.
The Lone Star state is home to the Dallas Cowboys, the world's best barbecue and the biggest truck market in the U.S. Texas buyers account for 15.7% of the nation's half-ton pickup market, according to Stephanie Brinley, principle auto analyst at IHS Markit. That means one out of every six half-ton pickups — like the Ford F-150, Chevy Silverado and Ram 1500 — are sold in Texas.
Jeff Williams, another Texas rancher, said the technology interests him, “especially if they can make an electric that has the same power and range as a one-ton diesel.” But he remains skeptical of Rivian's claims and the promises made by other automakers that their electric pickups will offer capabilities matching their gas and diesel models.
Williams operates two farms and six ranches in what he called “far West Texas,” 275 miles from El Paso and even further from San Antonio. So, for him, the two critical challenges are range and charging. And out in his part of the Lone Star State there are few public chargers, especially the high-speed ones he'd need access to when hauling his livestock to market.
City dwellers “The other issue, out in the remote area where I live, is access to a mechanic,” Williams added. He employs a mechanic who can handle his diesel and gas trucks, but if an all-electric model “breaks down, what do I do?”
For his part, rancher Helvey says he does expect there'll be a market for all-electric trucks “for city dwellers and weekend warriors.”
But even some of the folks that might fall into those categories remain skeptical.
“I like the idea” of a battery-powered truck,” said Jennifer Stevenson, an emergency room physician at a suburban Detroit hospital and an owner of a new Ford F-150 Lariat. And while she rarely hauls much cargo or tows a trailer, Stevenson and her fiancé take frequent trips in remote places, such as Michigan's Upper Peninsula, and “I don't want to have to worry about finding a place to plug in.”
So, if ranch owners and weekend warriors remain skeptical, who might be ready to plug in with an all-electric pickup? The most likely target is fleet owners, said Brendan Jones, the chief operating officer of Electrify America. That's the company funded by $2 billion out of Volkswagen's settlement of its diesel emissions scandal, and it is spending most of that money to set up a nationwide network of EV chargers.
Workhorse W-15 Electric Pickup Truck.Source: WorkhorseElectrify AmericaFleet owners “know how and where they use their trucks” and whether they can deliver on their daily needs, both in terms of payload capacity and range, said Jones, during a conversation at Electrify America's headquarters outside Washington, D.C. They may also find the lower operating costs and reduced maintenance that battery-electric vehicles require attractive.
Jones pointed to the fact that a number of fleets are already moving to larger commercial trucks, or at least testing them out. That includes delivery services such as UPS and FedEx. Amazon has also teamed up with Rivian, leading a consortium that will pump $700 million into the start-up. While the online retailer hasn't said what it has in mind, it has been widely speculated it wants to launch a fleet of battery-powered delivery trucks.
Fleets have the advantage of not only knowing their daily needs but also the ability to set up their own charging systems. For work-oriented vehicles such as pickups to gain traction with retail customers, said Jones, “You're not going to see (that happen) until you have an infrastructure.” And that's something Electrify America and competitors such as EVgo and ChargePoint hope to put in place over the coming decade.
Paul Eisenstein is a freelancer for CNBC. His quotes from Electrify America COO Brendan Jones came from an interview in Washington, D.C., where the company paid for Eisenstein's travel and accommodations.

Polestar will qualify for $7,500 electric-car credit separately from Volvo

Polestar 2
The 2021 Polestar 2 will look and feel a lot like a Volvo, but federal and state regulators won't treat it like one in the U.S. when it comes to qualifying for various green-car incentives.

The biggest incentive is the $7,500 offered as an Internal Revenue Service tax credit for the first 200,000 electric cars sold by an automaker.

READ MORE: 2020 Volvo XC60 T8, 2020 V60 T8 plug-in hybrids get Polestar Engineered performance

“We get the full credit, the $7,500 is there and it's not attached to Volvo,” spokesman J.P. Canton told Green Car Reports at a private media unveiling of the Polestar 2 electric sedan in San Francisco. “We have to sell 200,000 Polestars until it runs out.”

That leaves the door open for Volvo to earn up to 200,000 of the $7,500 federal credits on its own electric cars (minus the few plug-in hybrids the Swedish brand has sold so far) alongside state, and other credits.

The separate, untapped $7,500 incentive pool could give Polestar a big advantage out of the gate compared to General Motors and Tesla, which have both sold more than 200,000 qualifying vehicles in the U.S.

READ ALSO: Tesla Model 3 vs. Polestar 2: How the two electric cars compare

“Polestar Automotive USA is a separate brand,” said Gregor Hembrough, Polestar's head in the U.S., clarifying that the cars will be registered not as Volvos but as Polestars.

The Polestar 2 is a high-riding all-wheel-drive electric sedan that began life as a Volvo concept car intended to replace the S40, but its design was transferred to Polestar. It is fitted with a pair of 150-kilowatt electric motors and a 78-kilowatt-hour lithium-ion battery stuffed in its driveline tunnel.

The car is expected to go on sale by the end of the second quarter of 2020 in the U.S., initially in West Coast markets. Though select Volvo dealers will actually handle logistics of the Polestar sales, the automaker plans to build gallery-like showrooms staffed with product experts not on commission—similar in concept to those used by Tesla.