When Shai Agassi departed software giant SAP AG in March, it surprised many people because he was on track to become chief executive of the giant company.
He left declaring bold plans to help convert his native Israel and its neighbor Jordan into gasoline-free economies with nationwide electronic transportation systems. It was a noble vision.
Well, now he’s already emerged, leading a new Silicon Valley company to make electric cars, backed with a whopping $200 million in initial funding from Israel Corp., an Israel-based oil, trade and shipping conglomerage (which invested $100 million), VantagePoint Venture Partners and others.
The WSJ has the scant details available on the still-stealth, Palo Alto, Calif., company code-named Better Place, which already employs ten.
According to the piece, Agassi wants to use existing battery technologies, which are enough to get cars to go about 100 miles before recharging. The twist: Instead of making customers pay for the car and the expensive battery, they’d pay only for the car.
Meanwhile, his company would buy and own the batteries, and charge the car owner a monthly subscription fee to recharge the batteries. It would also set up a network of service centers to charge the batteries. It’s not clear whether this will substantially reduce costs, because someone would still have to pay the cost of dealing with the batteries, and the cost leaves electric cars still more expensive than conventional cars. But at least it takes away some of the stress on consumers who balk when they consider the complication of having to replace batteries every few years.
7 Comments
-
Mike said:
very informative
thanks -
Kerry beauhrt said:
This business plan is God-awful and ilustrates how many errors can be made when the person obviouslt doesn’t understand the business.
-
Ahren said:
How about these people and the car companies get together to help mankind? Water powered cars and magnet powered cars have been around for at least 50 years, yet we still are using oil and sucking the breast of Big Oil.
-
Ahren said:
checkout waterpoweredcars.com and google and youtube zero point energy
-
Greg C. said:
It would be helpful if just one reporter would ask the obvious question, “given the sorry state of the nations’ electrical grid, with states like California having regular brownouts in the summer months, where is all the extra electicity going to come from to power these stations?”.
-
Edward Pizzuti said:
besides renting the batteries what else will he have over Tesla Motors who already has finished electric/battery cars and lots of orders? And has he thought about the design of his car, in a market where competition is sure to get fierce in the next few years, I hope he is not relying on current mass marketing car giants to design a car so desirable that will negatively effect the sales of their own models. I hope he considers small, creative design firms like ours to get a prototype that will get consumers excited.
-
john@carhireuk said:
I think regardless we are going to have to find a way to make use of electric cars. Anything that is going to help the environment is a must.
5 Trackbacks
1:49 pm
Former SAP Exec Emerges to Deploy Grid for Electric Cars| Zoli’s Blog said:
[...] isRealli, Earth2Tech, Business Week, alarm:clock, Between the Lines, Techdirt, Babbling VC, VentureBeat, All Tesla Motors Blogs , The Energy [...]
12:30 pm
VentureBeat » Nissan / Renault and Project Better Place to collaborate on line of electric cars said:
[...] recently amassed $200 million in venture investments but only disclosed a vague plan to lease out batteries and electric cars, as [...]
6:58 am
Cleantech investment in 2007 up 43 percent, tops $3 billion » VentureBeat said:
[...] reckoning was Shai Agassi’s Project Better Place, which is based in Palo Alto and took $200 million from US investors, although its business plan is to build an alternate fuel network in [...]
9:40 am
Electric cars go faster in small countries: Project Better Place moves into Denmark » VentureBeat said:
[...] recall, is the company started by former SAP heir-apparent Shai Agassi and funded with a giant $200 million round. The company’s aim is to spread the adoption of electric cars by building the infrastructure [...]
6:11 am
Solutions to our energy crisis. » Agassi’s “Project Better Place” for Israel. said:
[...] sustainable, clean energy sources such as Solar and Wind. The initial funding for the startup was $200 million from investors such as VantagePoint Venture Partners, Israel Corp, Morgan Stanley, Ofer Shipping [...]