Dyson’s Electric Car Play Has (Some Of) The Right Stuff
Dyson might succeed. They might fail. But at 2.7 billion pounds and with their success points, they are one of the more interesting new entrants.
Dyson might succeed. They might fail. But at 2.7 billion pounds and with their success points, they are one of the more interesting new entrants.
A record 55,000 new passenger electric cars were registered last month in China, with the market growing 68% compared to the same month last year and pulling the year-to-date (YTD) count to over 282,000 electric cars, up 45% year over year (YoY).
The plug-in market in Europe had a surprisingly strong August month, with over 22,000 registrations, up 68% year over year (YoY). That pushes the plug-in market share up to 1.7%.
After South Australia experienced a major blackout recently, Tesla CEO Elon Musk publicly proposed that his company could install an energy storage system to solve the problem, and that if the system wasn’t installed within 100 days of signing a grid connection agreement, he was willing to do the job for free.
The Canadian investment fund Evolve Funds Group is planning to launch what will be the world’s first “future car”–focused exchange-traded fund (ETF) on Friday, according to reports.
New incentives meant to increase community member use of plug-in electric and hybrid vehicle use have been revealed by the Dubai Supreme Council of Energy, at a recent press conference.
Ben Sullins of Teslanomics calculates that a Tesla Model 3 equipped the way most people want it will cost about $890 a month including payments, electricity and insurance.
Tesla’s infotainment systems will now be powered by computer chips supplied by Intel, rather than by Nvidia, according to a new report from Bloomberg.
The top 20 CleanTechnica stories of the past week were again packed with fun stuff, Tesla videos, original commentary and analysis from CleanTechnica on the EV revolution, and much more.
Okay. The video posted a few days ago about the first Tesla Model 3 delivered outside of California kinda bombed when the person who uploaded it to YouTube subsequently removed it. That’s a shame. Got too much publicity, we suppose. But that’s not the end of the story. Plenty of others are committing Model 3 sightings to video and posting them to YouTube, so we turned our ace research team loose (that would be Kyle Field) and came up with some other videos to help you deal with your disappointment.