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Sep 01, 2008 -- Norway's TH!NK City electric car coming to the United States

The Norwegians have a new electric car coming to the United States in 2009 that's got Clark very excited. It's called the TH!NK City and it gets 110 miles on a single charge and goes up to 65 mph. The cost? About 2 cents a mile! And it doesn't eat up foreign imported oil like a gas-engine vehicle.

In other news, a group of researchers in the lab have developed an easy way to take sugar and turn it into a power plant for a hydrogen-powered vehicle. This development is not ready for the mainstream yet, but it's in the works. There are a lot of promising advances that are going to take a while to materialize in the marketplace.

In the meantime, Clark wants to encourage you to look at offbeat transportation alternatives. Washington D.C. has launched a Smartbike program. You pay $40/year for access to bicycles that are strategically placed around town. Users have a code to unlock the bikes and lock them up again at the other end of their commute. It's almost like a Zipcar program for bikes!

Worried about getting too sweaty during your ride? Buy an electric bike for around $600 and it will be no sweat getting around. Clark knows this all sounds kooky, but we need to expand our minds and realize we're not sitting ducks for foreign-oil interests. Christa has long had a fascination with a bicycle that runs on a weed whacker motor. If you Google "weed whacker bicycle," you'll even find videos that detail how to convert your bike.

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What others are saying

  • RE: electric cars...
    It's true tat the grid still has to burn fossil fuels, but most of our electricity comes from coal (in the US) since we have such an abundant supply. Only 1% comes from oil according the DOE.

    http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epm/epm_sum.html
  • electric cars...
    still "eat up foreign imported oil like a gas-engine vehicle." Because our electricity grid is for the most part still powered by foreign imported oil, right?

    Going electric is a nice step; but a far cry from actual reduction in dependence on foreign interests.
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