Fisker Rebirth Watch: Will Karma Strike Again?

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

It’s been a long wait since Henrik Fisker’s brainchild floated — bloated and belly-first — to the surface of the automotive pool, but we’re told a new plug-in hybrid statusmobile is on the way. That means new jobs coming to the Detroit area for as long as Henrik can keep the money rolling.

Last week, the Michigan Economic Development Corporation pledged $450,000 in funding so that Karma Automotive LLC — formerly Fisker Automotive — can build an engineering and purchasing building in Troy. The city plans to offer additional funds to see the $3.6 million project get off the ground, where the reborn company plans to employ up to 150 people.

The luxury automaker, which changed its identity after its 2013 bankruptcy and subsequent purchase by Chinese firm Wanxiang, plans to unveil its new Karma Revero later this summer. Well, “new” means different things to different people. The Revero is expected to be an updated version of the ill-fated Fisker Karma, which saw a 2012 model year run of under 2,000 vehicles.

The Fisker saga, which would make a good stage play, saw the problem plagued, Finnish-built vehicles touted by celebs and the federal government alike. Both lost a lot of money on the deal. The U.S. Department of Energy lost about $139 million of its $528 million conditional loan after it froze Fisker’s cash flow.

Wanxiang bought Fisker’s assets at auction for $149 million.

Now that the old name’s been jettisoned and government incentives are again flowing, Karma can work on getting the Revero built at its Moreno Valley, California production facility. Tooling and equipment was sent over from the old facility in Finland. Though details on the new model are scarce, we know it will gain its electrical components from BMW.

That should keep DiCaprio from being stranded in the rain.

[Source: CBS, HybridCars] [Image: Wikimedia]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Redav Redav on Jun 15, 2016

    "Strike," as in strike a match, as in catch fire? Yeah, probably.

  • WildcatMatt WildcatMatt on Jun 30, 2016

    Any word on the fate of Wilmington Assembly? USA Today says it was part of the sale and now belongs to Wanxiang, but the only thing they seem to be doing with it is letting the grass grow in the parking lot.

  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh since most EVs are north of 70k specc'ed out + charger installation this is not news. You don't buy a new car every few years.This is simply saturation and terrible horrible third world country level grid infrastructure (thanks greedy exces like at the holiday farm fire where I live)
  • MaintenanceCosts I think pretty much all of the difference between this year and last year is that the right-wing noise machine, facing an audience crisis, has decided that EVs, and wildly distorted claims about EVs and EV mandates, are a good way to to get gullible people angry and start replacing lost traffic.
  • MaintenanceCosts I'd like to see a comparison between this and the base Model S, which should have similar performance numbers.I spent five days and 500 miles with a base 2022 Model S in Texas last week, and enjoyed it far more than my previous Model 3 drives - I think the Model S is a very good to excellent car, although "FSD" is a huge fail and I'd still have a lot of trouble giving Elon Musk money.
  • DesertNative In hindsight, it's fascinating to see how much annual re-styling American cars received in the 1950's. Of course, that's before they had to direct their resources to other things like crash-worthiness, passenger safety, pollution controls, etc. It was a heady time for car designers, but the rest of us have benefited immeasurably from the subsequent changes.
  • Cprescott Aside for how long it takes to charge golf carts since I don't live in a place where I can have my own charger, is the game that golf cart makers play when your battery fails and they blame you and charge you $15-25k to replace them.
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