BMW Pulling Back on IEV Program, Charging Infrastructure One Reason

Ronnie Schreiber
by Ronnie Schreiber

Automobile magazine reports that BMW is backing away from its ambitious electrically powered i vehicle program. Uncertainty about continued government support, a crazy quilt of state and national policies around the globe, a lack of charging infrastructure and, perhaps most importantly, a continued lack of consumer acceptance are said to have contributed to BMW’s decision.

So far the proposed i5 “eco van” and the i1 city car have been put on ice. The higher profile i3 sedan and i8 sports car, which BMW was just touting on the 2012 auto show circuit, may also never see production, perhaps replaced by a plug-in hybrid, seen as more marketable. Though they’ve cited different figures, BMW at one point hoped to sell 100,000 i3 units a year as well as an additional 10,000 i8s. Perhaps indicative of the charging infrastructure problem, the non-profit arm of an investment company that had received a $709,000 federal grant to install 68 EV chargers in and around Syracuse, New York has now torn them out and is suing ECOtality, the maker of the Blink chargers, saying that the company misrepresented the ability of the chargers to track and charge individual users for their electricity usage.

Instead of users getting billed, Synapse Sustainability Trust, the non-profit division of Synapse Partners LLC, which installed the chargers, had to pay for the electricity. ECOtality denies any wrongdoing, saying that its chargers can track usage and costs through what it claims is it’s already successful membership system. The Blink chargers are being replaced by Coulomb Technologies “Chargepoint” stations, which apparently can bill individual users.

The grant was from the US Dept of Energy and was administered by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority. Though NYSERDA had originally reimbursed the politically connected Synapse for the replacement costs, in the end Synapse had to pay back some of those funds and bear a greater share of the cost of replacement. Spokesmen for Synapse and NYSERDA now brag how no public moneys will be spent fixing their own mistake.

There’s some irony in BMW citing a lack of charging infrastructure for consumer acceptance of EVs as the charging stations are switched out in Syracuse. According to New York state DMV records and Syracuse.com, there are only 30 vehicles in the five county region that could conceivably use those 68 charging stations. Six Nissan Leafs, one Mitsubishi MiEV, 21 Chevy Volts, and a Toyota Prius (I’m assuming that’s one of the new plugin Prius models), plus one government-owned Ford.

Ronnie Schreiber edits Cars In Depth, a realistic perspective on cars & car culture and the original 3D car site. If you found this post worthwhile, you can dig deeper at Cars In Depth. If the 3D thing freaks you out, don’t worry, all the photo and video players in use at the site have mono options. Thanks for reading – RJS

Ronnie Schreiber
Ronnie Schreiber

Ronnie Schreiber edits Cars In Depth, the original 3D car site.

More by Ronnie Schreiber

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 10 comments
  • Lorenzo Massachusetts - with the start/finish line at the tip of Cape Cod.
  • RHD Welcome to TTAH/K, also known as TTAUC (The truth about used cars). There is a hell of a lot of interesting auto news that does not make it to this website.
  • Jkross22 EV makers are hosed. How much bigger is the EV market right now than it already is? Tesla is holding all the cards... existing customer base, no dealers to contend with, largest EV fleet and the only one with a reliable (although more crowded) charging network when you're on the road. They're also the most agile with pricing. I have no idea what BMW, Audi, H/K and Merc are thinking and their sales reflect that. Tesla isn't for me, but I see the appeal. They are the EV for people who really just want a Tesla, which is most EV customers. Rivian and Polestar and Lucid are all in trouble. They'll likely have to be acquired to survive. They probably know it too.
  • Lorenzo The Renaissance Center was spearheaded by Henry Ford II to revitalize the Detroit waterfront. The round towers were a huge mistake, with inefficient floorplans. The space is largely unusable, and rental agents were having trouble renting it out.GM didn't know that, or do research, when they bought it. They just wanted to steal thunder from Ford by making it their new headquarters. Since they now own it, GM will need to tear down the "silver silos" as un-rentable, and take a financial bath.Somewhere, the ghost of Alfred P. Sloan is weeping.
  • MrIcky I live in a desert- you can run sand in anything if you drop enough pressure. The bigger issue is cutting your sidewalls on sharp rocks. Im running 35x11.5r17 nittos, they're fine. I wouldn't mind trying the 255/85r17 Mickey Thompsons next time around, maybe the Toyo AT3s since they're 3peak. I like 'em skinny.
Next