
Mitsubishi, TEPCO to team up on electric car

Tokyo Electric Power Co.
(TEPCO) president
Nobuya Minami.
AFP PHOTO/JIJI PRESS
Tuesday, August 23, 2005
TOKYO, (AFP) - Struggling. automaker Mitsubishi Motors will tie up with
giant Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) in its bid to create a small
environmentally friendly electric car, the Yomiuri Shimbun reported last week.
TEPCO, the world’s largest private power company, will provide technology
on electric charging from home outlets and batteries to help Mitsubishi
develop the car, the Yomiuri said in its evening edition.
Mitsubishi wants to start selling the small car, called the Miev, in 2008
at a price tag of two million yen (18,300 dollars) or less. The car will be
able to run 250 kilometers (155 miles) on a four-hour charge from home power
outlets, the report said.
A TEPCO spokesman said there was no deal as reported but said the power
company “has been exchanging information on battery-linked technologies with
various manufacturers, including Mitsubishi Motors.”
Mitsubishi officials were not immediately available for comment.
The Miev would be a minivehicle, which by Japanese law means it has engine
capacity of less than 660 cc in gasoline-powered vehicles. Roughly 60 percent
of vehicles sold in Japan are minivehicles.
Japanese automakers have seen a major success, particularly in the US
market, by selling environmentally friendly hybrid cars.
Mitsubishi is Japan’s only money-losing automaker and is struggling to
recover after a series of scandals over cover-ups of defects.
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