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Tesla’s latest competitor is an electric 3-wheeler

Electra Meccanica’s Solo set to hit LA streets in December

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VANCOUVER: It’s all-electric like a Tesla. It’s priced like a Ford Fiesta. It’s one of the oddest-looking vehicles you’ve ever seen – and it may just redefine the commuter car.

As General Motors Co prepares to shut the plant near Toronto that got car-making started in Canada more than a century ago, a new model is taking shape in a tiny production facility in Vancouver’s outskirts.

Meet the Solo – a one-seater vehicle made by Electra Meccanica Vehicles Corp that costs US$15,500. By December, 5,000 will be zipping around the streets of Los Angeles, with an additional 70,000 to be delivered over the next two years across the West Coast.

Electra Meccanica may have a market value of just US$44mil, yet it has US$2.4bil in pre-orders.

The peculiar three-wheeler may even offer a lifeline to General Motors’ doomed Oshawa, Ontario plant, which is set to close this year and put 3,000 people out of work.

“We have had some discussion­s around that,” said Electra Meccanica chief executive officer Jerry Kroll, adding no decisions have been made.

“Nothing would make me happier than to rehire all of those people, with a Canadian designed, engineered vehicle in Canada.”

Carmakers from Tesla Inc to Nissan Motor Co and Volkswagen AG are racing to make the car of the future. So far they’ve produced cleaner, quieter but costlier versions of the ones already out there.

Profitabil­ity has been elusive – many manufactur­ers are likely losing money on each unit, but sell in pursuit of future market share, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

Electra Meccanica says its quirky reimaginat­ion of an automobile aims to redefine the category.

“Tesla is doing a good job on building big cars – convention­al cars that are electric,” said Kroll, who earlier worked on electric drive systems for NASA in California and befriended the co-founders of Tesla, Marc Tarpenning and Martin Eberhard.

“This company is producing the car that Elon Musk wishes he were building,” Kroll said in a separate interview with Bloomberg Television.

“It is great to produce a US$45,000, a US$100,000 car or a US$250,000 car. But for the masses? A US$15,000 car that can them to stop using gas. That’s creative.”

Leona Green, 64, and her son Matthew, 41, were the Solo’s first customers and have been driving it for two years in Vancouver. They park it on the sidewalk in front of the deli they own for catering runs and have ordered a second because they kept fighting over it.

“I almost don’t want everybody having one,” she said. At least a few times a day, she passes out cards with the Solo’s specs, kept on hand to avoid answering the same questions repeatedly.

So how does it perform? Zero to 60 miles (97 km) per hour in eight seconds, not far off a Porsche Cayenne. It charges in three hours, has a 100-mile range and reaches a top speed of over 82 miles an hour. Remarkably, it can somehow hold the contents of a fully loaded Costco shopping cart in front and back storage nooks.

get Kroll sees the Solo doing for transport what smartphone­s did for computing – something smaller, better and utterly indispensa­ble.

“The push back was people thinking they needed a bigger screen,” he said from his Vancouver office. “But today everybody knows you sell a lot more iPhones and make a lot more money on each than you did on iMacs.”

Those lofty ambitions don’t quite match the company’s share price, which could use a high-voltage jolt. Electra Meccanica soared in its first weeks of trading on the OTCQB Venture Market in 2017, at one point hitting a high of US$16 a share, before moving to the Nasdaq last August. It’s tumbled 92% from its record, trading on Tuesday at just US$1.34.

That reflects some of the skepticism that’s sunk in about the prospects of what looks a bit like a glorified encapsulat­ed tricycle.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? New player: Kroll sits inside a Solo electric vehicle in Vancouver. Electra Meccanica, which has a market value of just US$41mil but US$2.4bil in pre-orders, says its quirky reimaginat­ion of an automobile aims to redefine the category.
— Bloomberg New player: Kroll sits inside a Solo electric vehicle in Vancouver. Electra Meccanica, which has a market value of just US$41mil but US$2.4bil in pre-orders, says its quirky reimaginat­ion of an automobile aims to redefine the category.

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