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$20,000 electric car: Toyota FT-EV

  • By Joshua Dowling in Detroit
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image The Toyota FT-EV could be on the road for around $20,000. Photo Gallery

Toyota has unveiled a budget priced electric car that can be driven up to 80km without using a drop of petrol...

Just don’t drive further than that otherwise you’ll need a long extension cord.

The car could be sold in Australia from as little as $20,000 within three years, although this is not yet confirmed.

The Japanese maker fired the first shot on the eve of the 2009 Detroit motor show, revealing its surprise future model in the hometown of North America’s three biggest car makers.


It is impossible to overestimate the importance of the Toyota FT-EV, writes PAUL GOVER from Detroit. The plug-in concept car is a seismic shift by the world's largest carmaker and the next step from its ambitious move into the hybrid world. Read more here...


Toyota’s announcement came as General Motors, Ford and Chrysler continue their fight for survival and calls for assistance from the US Government, and as the global economic crisis tightens its grip on the car industry.

The concept car is called the FT-EV and is based on a model called the iQ, which recently went on sale in Japan.

The tiny Toyota is bigger than a Smart city car but smaller than most other hatchbacks and can be fully recharged in a little more than seven hours.

It is due to go into production in Japan in 2012 and it could be on sale in Australia soon after.

“We are certainly looking at,” said Toyota Australia’s product planning manager Peter Evans. “It’s a fascinating vehicle. It is definitely one of our priorities for the Australian market. I think you will start to see a major shift towards these sorts of vehicles from 2012 and beyond.”

Toyota would not speculate on the retail price of its new electric car so far out from launch, but a similarly-sized petrol-powered hatchback costs about $15,000, and an electric motor and battery pack would likely add about $5000 to the cost of the car, say industry analysts, bringing the total close to $20,000.

Significantly, on battery power alone the tiny Toyota will travel almost 20km further than the Chevrolet Volt electric car to be made by General Motors.

However, the Toyota must be recharged after 80km, whereas the Volt has a petrol generator which extends total driving range up to 1000km.

The Toyota electric car is a tiny four-seater  hatchback whereas the Volt is about the size of a Holden Astra sedan.

Both cars are due in Australia about the same time – by the end of 2012 – if all goes to plan.

A spokesman for Toyota in North America said last year’s spike in the price of petrol was no accident, and worse is to come.

In a statement issued to media, Irv Miller, Toyota Motor Sales group vice president, environmental and public affairs, said: “[The spike in the price of oil] was a brief glimpse of our future. We must address the inevitability of peak oil by developing vehicles powered by alternatives to liquid-oil fuel, as well as new concepts, like the iQ, that are lighter in weight and smaller in size. This kind of vehicle, electrified or not, is where our industry must focus its creativity.”

The comments echo those made by the boss of General Motors, Rick Wagoner, at last year’s Detroit motor show. In his address to media he said: “There is no doubt demand for oil is outpacing supply at a rapid pace, and has been for some time now. As a business necessity and an obligation to society we need to develop alternative sources of propulsion.”

Mr Wagoner cited US Department of Energy figures which show the world is consuming roughly 1000 barrels of oil every second of the day, and yet demand for oil is likely to increase by 70 per cent over the next 20 years.

Last year, Toyota announced it planned to sell one million petrol-electric hybrids annually from 2010, starting with at least 10 new hybrid vehicles.

Toyota is also trialing a large number of plug-in hybrid vehicles with fleet customers later this year, deploying across North America 500 Prius cars adapted with plug-in technology and using lithium-ion batteries.

Battery technology has been one of the biggest hurdles for electric cars because they are sensitive to extreme temperatures, are heavy and bulky to accommodate and costly and time-consuming to produce.

The 2009 Detroit Motor Show

 

 

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 61 comments

  • "revealing its surprise future model in the hometown of North America’s three biggest car makers" That is certainly a slap in the face!! But, the big arrogant 3 certainly need it. It's obvious to anybody with a brain that electrics and hybrids are the future.

    Phil B of US Posted on 11 January 2009 10:52am
  • Electric cars are worse for the environment than petrol-powered cars. That is because the fuel needed to generate the electricity to charge the batteries is much more than that required to run a car directly. But you can never under-estimate the stupidity of the public.

    Jay Posted on 11 January 2009 10:42am
  • oh yay. for just 20K i can get a tiny car i cant fit my family and shopping in that MIGHT get me to the next town if i drive at walking pace. i guess i wont need to do the 600km round trip to visit the chain stores to do big ticket shopping anymore? australia is a big country - we do big km, often with a car full of stuff. we need decent sized cars not impractical matchboxes.

    john doe Posted on 11 January 2009 10:33am
  • All we need now is nuclear power to handle the increased power load during the night when all our electric cars are plugged in and recharging. Not too green when you consider the extra coal that would need to be nurned to make the electricity for the recharge. Might also be time to invest in a tow truck business or an emergency power recharge/battery swap call out service.

    Allan of Gold Coast Posted on 11 January 2009 10:31am
  • A 7 hour charge gets you 80kms??? Woohooo what's the point ? ??

    The Big Fella of Telarah Posted on 11 January 2009 10:30am
  • 20 grand and 80k's. Why don't we just allow golf carts on the road!

    Sunshine Coaster Posted on 11 January 2009 10:26am
  • Thats my car!!! Does it come with some small whine to alert people that you are near them.

    Joan Mohr Posted on 11 January 2009 10:26am
  • I cannot see the sense in electic cars when electricity is expensive and rising and not yet a very green alternative. I would rather see nuclear powered engines that would last the lifetime of a car without recharging. Without screaming that we can't dispose of nuclear waste (yet) the upside is that it takes up very little room on the planet. we cannot dispose of the waste caused by the creation of electicity either. It will be joy to the ears of carbon credit resellers though as they don't want real alternatives either.

    ollie of sydney Posted on 11 January 2009 9:44am
  • To be more economical we need smaller lighter cars but we keep putting the little cars on the same roads as trucks that get bigger all the time. In an accident these mini cars offer no protection for occupants expecially if a truck is involved. I will stay in a full size vehicle with a chassis bugger the cost of fuel my life is worth more.

    John of Colac Posted on 11 January 2009 9:41am
  • The only way to go if we want to avoid being ransom by Crude Oil. Alternative energy.

    Tedi of Brisbane Posted on 11 January 2009 9:37am
  • Send me one , I will give it a try for 12 months.

    Greg of Adelaide Posted on 11 January 2009 9:32am

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