Coda announces deal for affordable electric cars with Great Wall Motors

Electric car maker Coda Automotive’s second act is well underway with a new partnership deal, with Great Wall Motors of China, to jointly develop an electric car for worldwide distribution, targeting an MSRP closer to that of equivalent gasoline cars.

Electric vehicle charging station guide

Coda Automotive announced today, from the Beijing Auto Show, that parent company Coda Holdings had signed an agreement with Great Wall Motors to co-develop what the company claims will be the most affordable electric car on the market, with a price “comparable to entry-level internal combustion engine vehicles”. Which means the company’s goal is to shrink the price premium over equivalent gasoline cars.

Almost no information about this new car has been released at this time, other than it being affordable. Coda’s partner in this venture, Great Wall Motors, is a large and fast-growing Chinese automaker, which delivered nearly 500,000 vehicles in 2011. The two companies say this will be “the first all-electric vehicle for worldwide development and distribution.”

Great Wall already has distributors around the world, and recently opened a manufacturing plant in Bulgaria, but the company does not have any operations in the U.S. or Canada. Coda will handle distribution of the resulting vehicles in the U.S., while Great Wall will do so elsewhere. The initial target markets are Europe, China and U.S.

Electric vehicle charging station guide

The agreement covers not only development of one car targeted for delivery in mid-2014, but to go on to developing other vehicles from Great Wall’s product line. A peek on the Great Wall Motors website shows the company manufactures a full range of vehicles from compact cars to SUV’s. For example, the Voleex C10, is the company’s compact car. As a gasoline car it comes with either a 1.2L or 1.5L engine, has an 8 foot wheelbase, and is a four seater with a tiny cargo area (330 liter) unless the rear seats are folded down (1100 liter).

“This marks the launch of our partnership with Great Wall Motors that will enable us to bring EVs to global markets in a very efficient and cost effective manner,” said Phil Murtaugh, CEO, CODA Holdings. “We’re excited to work with Great Wall Motors to develop the second product in Coda’s portfolio, to bring another solution to a global problem and together make high-quality clean technology accessible. Ultimately, this will enable drivers worldwide to go electric affordably and support our mission of putting an EV in everyone’s garage.”

Coda is already experienced in manufacturing an electric car in collaboration with an automaker. The basic idea is to locate a manufacturer making a suitable gasoline powered car, and develop with that manufacturer modifications enabling it to be built as an electric car. For example, Tesla Motors started this way, working with Lotus Engineering on modifications to a Lotus sports car, enabling Tesla to build it into the Tesla Roadster. Coda’s electric sedan is manufactured using a similar process.

Coda’s first electric car is being assembled, and sold, in California, but major parts of the car are manufactured in China by Haifei Motor Co. That car has a design similar to typical sedans such as the Honda Civic, has an EPA rated range of 88 miles, seats five people, has a cavernous trunk, and is the result of a collaboration between Coda Holdings and Chinese automaker Haifei Motor Co. Haifei supplies engineless car bodies (a.k.a. gliders) to Coda, which are described on Haifei’s website as the Haifei Saibao Electric Motor Car (export), “a pure electric car developed for US market.” Coda imports the gliders and installs an electric drive train and other components, with final assembly and testing occurring in Benicia California at a facility managed by AMPORTS. Coda did final assembly if its first production electric car based on the Saibao Electric Motor Car in March 2012.

Electric vehicle charging station guide

For the time-being Coda’s relationship with Haifei is intact. The deal with Great Wall is a much deeper co-development arrangement, where the two companies will jointly develop intellectual property in the resultant vehicles. Additionally Great Wall brings a much wider product portfolio to the game. Coda brings experience with battery systems, electric drive train development, and taking a Chinese vehicle to production and sales in the U.S.

Coda’s battery packs are developed in a joint partnership between Coda Energy (sibling to Coda Automotive) and Chinese battery maker Tianjin Lishen.

Many say todays electric cars are too expensive, which really means they have a significant price premium over equivalent gasoline cars. For example the Ford Focus Electric has an MSRP of $39,200, but the gasoline version has an MSRP starting at $16,500, for a $13k price premium. What Coda intends to do is shrink this price premium, getting the MSRP much closer to equivalent gasoline cars, after incentives. Whether this means we’ll see a sub-$20,000 electric sedan (after incentives) remains to be seen. As a second act this deal sounds quite ambitious, to lead a movement towards affordable electric cars.

Originally published at TorqueNews: http://www.torquenews.com/1075/coda-announces-deal-affordable-electric-cars-great-wall-motors

J1772 extension cords

About David Herron

David Herron is a writer and software engineer living in Silicon Valley. He primarily writes about electric vehicles, clean energy systems, climate change, peak oil and related issues. When not writing he indulges in software projects and is sometimes employed as a software engineer. David has written for sites like PlugInCars and TorqueNews, and worked for companies like Sun Microsystems and Yahoo.

About David Herron

David Herron is a writer and software engineer living in Silicon Valley. He primarily writes about electric vehicles, clean energy systems, climate change, peak oil and related issues. When not writing he indulges in software projects and is sometimes employed as a software engineer. David has written for sites like PlugInCars and TorqueNews, and worked for companies like Sun Microsystems and Yahoo.

Leave a Reply