Toronto Star

Montreal set to unveil BYD electric cabs

Project will let the company flaunt its stuff on this side of the Pacific

- BENJAMIN HUNTING AUTOGUIDE.COM

The name BYD isn’t a familiar one to most North Americans. Despite its enormous resources and past attempts to crack the retail nut in Canada and the United States, the Chinese automaker has mostly stayed under the radar in this part of the world.

It’s fitting, then, that the project that will finally grant the world’s largest manufactur­er of electric vehicles the chance to flaunt its stuff on this side of the Pacific is one that has also avoided the big publicity blitz associated with similarly greenorien­ted campaigns. Indeed, the partnershi­p between Montreal’s E-Taxi and BYD has been carefully calculated to succeed by making its economic arguments at least as strong as its green ones.

“Our E-Taxi initiative isn’t taking a single cent of government money, past the standard rebate in the province of Quebec for purchasing an electric vehicle,” explains Yung Cuoung, the co-founder of E-Taxi. “The reason taxi operators are listening to what we have to say about electrific­ation is that we’re a private company that comes from the industry. We understand what its needs are, and we’re presenting an option that makes sense from a financial perspectiv­e on top of the environmen­tal benefits.”

The concept is simple: taxi owners replace their existing gas-powered cars with the BYD E6, which E-Taxi warrants bumper-to-bumper for five years, with no mileage limit. This also includes the city’s new logo wrap, along with any and all equipment — communicat­ions, navigation, video cameras, transactio­n processing — required to hit the streets and start earning its keep.

It’s not a lease; it’s an outright purchase program provided in partnershi­p with financial giant Desjardins (with E-Taxi guaranteei­ng each loan), and it’s being presented to taxi operators with a very serious message about the bottom line. “Given the cost of electricit­y in Quebec versus the price of fuel, we can easily demonstrat­e a savings of between $7,000 and $8,000 per year for each vehicle,” Cuoung says.

The financial component is an important one for taxi drivers, but it’s neck and neck with range. A taxi that’s sitting plugged into the wall is one that’s not generating any revenue. This is where the BYD E6 stands out from other would-be taxi options. Not only does it offer 300 kilometres of range on a single charge (more than enough to ensure it never needs to be plugged in during a typical shift), but it’s also been designed from the ground up to tackle the heavy-duty use cycle of a profession­al livery vehicle.

Think of it as the electrifie­d successor to the famed Checker Marathon that once prowled NYC streets, and you’ve got a good idea of where the E6 is coming from. It’s the combinatio­n of real-world durability and range that other batterypow­ered vehicles have a hard time matching at its price point. Add in the fact that the BYD can be completely topped up in two hours from a Level 2 charger, something that can easily be accomplish­ed while off-duty, and the appeal broadens.

Naturally, I was curious as to what it was like to drive a Chi- nese-built BYD electric car on Canadian roads, and Cuoung was happy to give me the opportunit­y to get behind the wheel of the company’s test mule.

Roughly the size and shape of a Toyota Prius V, only taller and somewhat wider, the E6 is a form-follows-function hatchback that’s surprising­ly roomy inside, with ample space for second-row riders as well as their luggage. Interior furnishing­s are equally functional, with hard-wearing plastics designed to absorb hundreds of thousands of miles of use without betraying their age.

Out on the road, the BYD E6’s electric operation offers a familiar EV experience, with regenerati­ve braking, multiple drive modes and quick-off-theline instant torque that helps the vehicle deal with the bulk imposed by its hardened con- struction and heavy, but stable, battery (whose lithium-ironphosph­ate chemistry is capable of withstandi­ng a huge number of charging cycles with no ill effects).

I had to remind myself that I was evaluating a car designed not to attract the roving eye of the general consumer, but rather satisfy the very specific needs of profession­al drivers. Seen through that lens, the E6’s adequate accelerati­on, relatively smooth ride and calm comportmen­t at highway speeds made it a definite step up over every terrifying ride home from the airport in a decrepit Town Car you’ve ever had to endure.

It might seem unusual for a company like E-Taxi to look to China for an EV solution when so many electric cars are increasing­ly available from traditiona­l Japanese, American and European brands.

“If you look at what is available from other manufactur­ers currently building electric cars for the average driver, we couldn’t get any guarantees that production levels would be high enough to meet the needs of our customers,” Cuoung says.

BYD for its part has moved away from the idea of selling its electric cars on a piecemeal retail basis in a country like Canada, where a small, widely dispersed population makes it expensive and impractica­l to set up a network of dealership­s and still turn a profit.

Instead, fleet orders like the one E-Taxi represents are seen as its future on the continent, with Montreal serving as the tip of the spear that will eventually extend its operations into other cities across the country. The goal remains to completely electrify Montreal’s 8,500 taxis within five years, and eliminate one of the city’s largest sources of air pollution in the process.

 ?? BENJAMIN HUNTING ?? E-Taxi will gradually replace its gas-powered fleet of cabs with the BYD E6.
BENJAMIN HUNTING E-Taxi will gradually replace its gas-powered fleet of cabs with the BYD E6.

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