Daily Green - Driving Directions

Tesla takes off with $465 mil in government funding

Tesla Roadster
Tesla Roadster (Photo: Jim Motavalli )

Tesla is getting more interesting by the day. Here's a company that was basically flat on its back just a couple of years ago, plagued by internal strife and trying to sell a then-$92,000 electric roadster that cost $140,000 to build. That's not my estimation, it's right from the blog of CEO Elon Musk, who was responding to a suit by an embittered co-founder.

I recently drove a Tesla Roadster (pictured) owned by the Vulcan Motor Club on a jaunt through rainy rural New Jersey, and I enjoyed it more than similar rides in even more expensive high-end supercars by Aston-Martin and Lamborghini.

And now Tesla is in fast company. The Department of Energy (DOE) announced June 23 that Tesla was one of three recipients — with Ford and Nissan — of $8 billion in advanced technology loan funds. Tesla will get $465 million to build a manufacturing plant for the new ultra-fast Model S sedan in Southern California and a second battery plant in the Bay Area.

The federal fund is designed to further a very worthy cause: Ensuring that the U.S. will be competitive in battery technology. It's quite clear that without federal assistance, we will lose that business to Asia, mostly to China and Korea. And right now it really matters who will capture this market: It is, unquestionably, the future of the auto industry.

I like what Tesla is doing — starting with a high-end vehicle and then, gradually, moving into more affordable markets as the company becomes solvent. Musk has told me that Tesla's third car will be even further downmarket than the Model S. The mainstream carmakers are approaching it differently, but they're plugging in, too.

Even the skeptics are starting to gain confidence in Tesla's prospects. The company has now delivered more than 500 roadsters, and is getting a handle on fulfilling the 800 it has pending. Daimler has bought nearly 10% of Tesla, and the two companies are working together on batteries for electric Smarts.

The largest recipient of the DOE funding is Ford, which got $5.9 billion to increase the fuel efficiency of a dozen popular models, from the Taurus to the Focus, Mustang, Escape, and F-150 truck. The upgrades include very economical direct-injection EcoBoost engines, electrically assisted steering, start-stop technology, and six-speed transmissions. Ten factories will get upgrades.

Nissan is the only foreign automaker to get funded, but it too is investing in U.S. factories. Its Smyrna, Tennessee, plant will be revamped to build the company's new battery car, and a second battery factory will be added at the same location. Nissan is playing it smart, because its battery strategy includes charging networks around the world to make sure the cars can plug in.

All told, that's $8 billion in federal funding from the action-oriented DOE, which has become a business incubator for green cars. Expect to see a lot more action, because this was only the first third of $25 billion in funding to be announced. General Motors and Chrysler will undoubtedly also get funded in one of the next rounds. Chrysler is already out of bankruptcy and GM soon will be back in the game, too.

 

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  • Posted by Rae Sun Jun 28, 2009 10:51pm PDT
    I find it very interesting that many, if not most of these so called "green" efforts to save the environment need to be subsidized by the government (read: our taxes), in order for them to economically feasible for the company to develop and produce. Meanwhile, the prices are out of reach for those of us who are just scraping by, especially in this economy. In other words, the government is taking my money and giving it to someone else, leaving me with to little to buy what it's telling me I need. I have heard some people say that the government should ban re-licensing older cars, thereby forcing the owners to buy new fuel efficent cars. Fine. Taking my car away from me doesn't put the money in my pocket to buy a new one. I would like to "go greener" in some areas of my life. I just can't afford to. This applies to all the areas that are more environmentally affected. Organic food, and non-toxic cleaners, tend to run about twice the cost of their non green counterparts. AND PLEASE DON'T TELL ME TO CUT BACK SOMEWHERE. I DON'T have three inch long nails, or a fancy hair style or color that needs to be maintained. I have suffered through the recent heat wave in the midwest without an air conditioner. The only luxury that I have is basic cable, because my TV is analog, and I can't put a roof antenna on my apartment building. I have cut back as much as I can. OK. done ranting now. :o)
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  • Posted by justanotherday Mon Jun 29, 2009 12:05pm PDT
    Rae, don't you know that agribiz & oil companies are subsidized by the US govt & have been for dozens of years? Corn farmers get huge payouts courtesy of the farm bill, & oil companies get giant tax breaks. These companies profit off the American taxpayer two times, once thru Congress, & again when they charge us at the marketplace (hello, high fructose corn syrup in every grocery store item, & then gas prices artificially fixed at the pump). You "can't afford to go green" bec. big business is raping us thanks to the Republicans they've had in their back pockets for years. When a few clean energy companies get a pittance, it's barely evening things out.
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