
Great news for Nissan and the electric car: the company has received 19,000 preorders for the LEAF all-electric vehicle, making it sold out for this year. The demand has exceeded expectations and the company may have to temporarily stop taking reservations.
Preorders for the LEAF began in April in the U.S. and Japan with the car not arriving at dealerships until the end of the year. Nissan hopes to sell 500,000 EVs starting in 2013.
This enthusiastic response to the LEAF bodes well for other all-electrics that will make their debut within the next couple of years, though it's not clear whether this signals a good market for the Chevy Volt when it comes out later this year.
From this ecogeek's perspective, the LEAF has a winning combination of factors that will make it successful. People are ready for an all-electric that meets their needs (it has a 100-mile range and can go up to 90 mph), is not super tiny (it's no smart car) and they can afford (it's about $25,000 after the federal tax credit and some states are taking even more off the top).
Because in a lot of ways this is the first truly consumer-ready EV, Nissan may get a lot of glory, but the company will also bear a lot of weight on their shoulders as a broader array of drivers get into EVs and go through the growing pains of this technology and the growing infrastructure to support it. Here's hoping there's more glory than pain.
via NY Times

written by Scott, May 30, 2010
written by Aaron, May 30, 2010
If however your electricity provider happens to be a renewable energy source, and you plan to replace your existing vehicle with an EV, then this is an excellent way to significantly reduce your carbon emissions.
Also, this isn't a logical arguement in favour of it, but I think it looks pretty awesome
written by Ken Snyder, May 30, 2010
Buying an electric car helps end the war on terror. Whether or not you think we're fighting for oil (which we would no longer need), part of the $700 billion we spend annually on foreign oil goes to people funding the terrorists. We keep that money here, they don't get funded. That money then stays in our economy too! That's like getting a stimulus package every year.
The Leaf also has a much simpler drive train. This leads to much lower maintenance costs and greater reliability.
It is also much easier to clean up the emissions from 10's of thousands of power plants than 100's of millions of vehicles. The sooner we transition to all electric vehicles the sooner we clean up the environment.
If you want to end the war, clean up the environment and give a boost to the economy, buy a Leaf!
written by Danny A, May 31, 2010
written by Nick, May 31, 2010
Nine More Myths About Electric Cars:
http://www.forbes.com/2010/04/24/think-city-batteries-technology-breakthroughs-electric-car.html
4. You'll need to build a lot more power plants. Busted: Actually there's enough off-peak electricity in the U.S. to power 79% of U.S. driving demand. As more EVs are deployed, it's important to ensure that the smart-charging (time-based charging management) and vehicle-to-grid connectivity progresses as well. A connected network of millions of micro-energy storage devices (which is what EVs will become) provides significant opportunities to improve the stability and performance of electric grids and better balance peak demand.
written by Steve A., June 01, 2010
written by Grant, June 02, 2010
You can't drive 2 cars at once, so driving an electric car instead of a gas-powered car will definitely reduce emissions, even if the electricity comes from 100% coal. Yes, I did the math and it's true. However, the idea is to move electricity generation away from coal and towards more cleaner sources over time. Unlike gasoline, there are many sources of electricity (solar photovoltaic, solar thermal, wind, hydroelectric, geothermal, tidal, nuclear, etc.).
Also, as others have mentioned, electricity is produced domestically while most oil is imported. That's also good for the economy/jobs and national security.
written by Mike, June 03, 2010
written by TJ, June 03, 2010
written by Zach, June 03, 2010
written by mee, June 04, 2010
why?
written by Gary Huff, June 23, 2010
written by Erik, July 14, 2010
1. exploration,
2. drilling,
3. transport,
4. storage,
5. refining,
6. transport to retail outlets, and
7. even going to get your car filled with gas causes pollution.
8. Gulf of Mexico, Oil tankers, other spills and accidents.
All of the above easily add up to way more than any pollution caused by electricity production to charge your EV.
So if we are comparing tailpipe emissions then EVs are 0 versus whatever toxic fumes come out of fossil fuel vehicles.
If on the other hand you want to compare total emission of energy production then you need to add the total pollution caused by oil production to the tailpipe emissions and you will find that EVs again win hands down without a contest.
written by toyota used cars, February 23, 2011
written by Natalie, March 14, 2011
written by Drömstugan, March 27, 2011
This car looks good. I can understand that people want to buy it. If this model comes to Sweden I would certainly be interested in buying one.
Kristian Segerberg
Drömstugan
written by Right Hand Drive, May 12, 2011
written by used cars in kerala, July 06, 2011
written by Signs Dublin, July 14, 2011
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