Elektromotive vende puntos de carga de pago para automóviles eléctricos a Arabia Saudí

Elektromotive ganó un contrato para proporcionar 140 Elektrobays a Arabia Saudí, lo que desde luego es todo una noticia. Ahora falta que empiecen también a poner parques eólicos y centrales de solar termoeléctrica en el desierto, y dejen el petróleo y sus contaminantes bajo tierra.

Elektromotive ha presentado en la conferencia EVS24 su primera estación de pago, con un conector trifásico que puede proporcionar 32 amperios a 240 voltios. El Elektrobay, ese es su nombre, será desplegado próximamente en el Reino Unido junto a un paquete GSM llamado EBConnect, que permitirá el pago de facturas vía SMS. Otra opción más práctica consistiría en abonar tus recargas en el momento con sólo menear el llavero frente al poste, igual que harías con un bono de pago sin contacto para el transporte público.

Actualmente Elektromotive ya tiene desplegados 160 puntos de carga en el Reino Unido, que próximamente serán actualizados con módulos de pago. Será realmente interesante ver cómo se compara el coste por km utilizando combustibles fósiles y electricidad "no doméstica".

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Elektromotive wins contract to supply 140 Elektrobays to Saudi Arabia

Elektromotive wins contract to supply 140 Elektrobay charging stations for electric vehicles to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Installation due to be completed summer 2009.

Electricity for the new breed of zero-emissions cars will soon be billed in the same way as mobile phone tariffs, under a new system developed by Elektromotive.

Users will no longer pay a blanket subscription for as much electricity as they can use; instead, they will choose from a number of billing options. These include pay-as-you-go via a personalised keyfob, payment via text message or recorded message.

Costs could also be added to utility bills or taken through number plate recognition.

Elektromotive’s EBConnect systems can identify energy use and bill customers accordingly. The firm says power providers can use the technology to package electricity into different tariffs, offering incentives such as free minutes. The system will be installed in all of Elektromotive’s Elektrobay charging stations.

In London’s Westminster, anyone can pay £75 annually for access to a street charger and get unlimited electricity. But Elektromotive’s Greg Simmons said EBConnect is ready to go and that is "inevitable" that people will be charged in that way.

"Electricity companies don’t give it away for nothing," he told Autocar. "This technology allows businesses to build commercial models out of selling electricity."

This would include setting up different tariffs, and with more people using electric vehicles and more companies getting involved, electricity could become cheaper on the street than in the home.

Elektromotive has also unveiled a three-phase ‘Fast Charge’ Elektrobay prototype, which would cut charge times. The firm says improvements in both cells and battery systems are needed, but a full charge for a car like a Smart ED could take just an hour.

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