Our
wonderfull oil company's at work for us again (No Laughing out loud)
If GM could build the EV1 to go up to 150
miles on a full charge 10 years ago, why can the Volt only go 40 miles on a
full charge today?
Excellent
question. Surely, battery technology has advanced in the past 10 years, right?
Yes, but
that’s not the real problem.
The battery
pack powering the EV1 was NiMH (nickel metal hydride). The Volt will be powered by lithium ion
batteries like the ones in laptops and cell phones.
So, yes,
battery technology has advanced in the last 10 years, but I think the problem
of reduced battery range goes beyond that. I think the “regression” in battery
capability is intentional. Here’s why:
In 1994
General Motors bought a controlling stake in ECD Ovonics. By doing so, GM
gained control over the development and manufacturing of Ovonics large NiMH
batteries. This move also provided GM with all the patents on the batteries.
As
mentioned, these NiMH batteries were used in the final examples of the EV1 in
1999, and reportedly worked flawlessly.
Fast forward
a couple of years to 2001, and a relatively unpublicized transaction took
place. GM sold its share of ECD Ovonics (and the patents) to…
Texaco.
Yep, the oil company.
Six days
later, Chevron completed its’ purchase of Texaco. So now the battery technology
that allowed the EV1 to run for 150 miles without a single drop of gasoline is
in the hands of one of the largest oil companies in the world.
In 2003, Texaco
Ovonics Battery Systems was renamed Cobasys, a 50/50 joint venture between
Chevron and ECD Ovonics. Independently, Chevron=2 0owns a 20% stake in ECD
Ovonics.
By now, you
are probably guessing that an oil company with the patents to a very effective
battery technology would never let that technology see the light of day. It
could very well put them out of business.
To state
that the technology was buried is not entirely true. But what Cobasys did is
extensively limit the ability for any one to get their hands on NiMH batteries.
And anyone found utilizing the NiMH battery technology that Cobasys had the
patents on were sued and sued often, such as Panasonic. In essence, Cobasys
controlled the market for NiMH batteries, and they were doing their best to make
sure none of the batteries made it into any electronic vehicle.
And that
brings us nearly full-circle to the current crop of electronic vehicles,
including the Volt. The Volt, as mentioned, will run on costlier lithium ion
batteries, which will drive up the cost of the Volt. GM could have used the
cheaper and proven NiMH batteries, but alas, they sold the patents to Cobasys
(Chevron). Do you think Chevron would allow the Volt to be produced with NiMH
batteries, eliminating the need for a gasoline engine to supply power after 40
miles? Not a chance.
Now, to be
fair, Cobasys is allowing their NiMH batteries to be used in the Chevy Malibu
hybrid, the Saturn Aura Hybrid, and the Saturn Vue Hybrid. But all of those
vehicles are hybrids, so they still rely on gasoline. Not one vehicle is
utilizing Cobasys batteries as the sole source of power.
But it gets
better. The company chosen to supply the Lithium Ion batteries for the Volt is
called A123Systems. Guess who they are partnered with? Cobasys.
Great.
So, to bring
this all together, the battery technology from 10 years ago that powered a car
150 miles, is now controlled by an oil company, and any new hybrid vehicle in
production now relies on batteries from an oil company.
Is it any
wonder that we are 10 years down the road from the EV1, but have yet to see a
true mass market electric vehicle? Not when the technology is owned by an oil
company. I guess we can only sit and wait until 2014 when the patents expire.