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EEStor CEO
EEStor CEO Richard Weir told CNET News.com in a brief phone interview
that commercial production of its energy storage system--a device that
holds electricity and functions somewhat like a battery--will be
sometime in the next 10 months or so. The unit is also referred to as an
"ultracapacitor."
"We intend to be in production on or before the middle of next year," he
said.
Although that means that the company could be in production by tomorrow,
the time frame is a little wider, and extends about six months or so
further into the future than previously stated.
Back in January, the company stated that it would start shipping 15
kilowatt hour electrical energy storage units to Canada's Zenn Motors,
its first customer, in 2007. Zenn's cars will mark the first commercial
application of EEStor's technology.
EEStor has been somewhat secretive about its technology, but proponents
claim it will revolutionize the automotive industry because it will
deliver electrical storage units that can power cars for hundreds of
miles and can be recharged in minutes. By contrast, lithium-ion
batteries now being prepared for cars take hours to charge and can take
cars 200 miles or less. Skeptics have wondered whether EEStor can live
up to its claims.
A six-month delay isn't that serious of an issue for a start-up, and a
number of clean-tech companies have faced delays this year. Tesla Motors
had to postpone its electric cars a few months, while in solar both
Miasole and DayStar Technologies have had delays. So has GreenFuel
Technologies, which wants to turn algae into fuel and clean carbon
dioxide from the environment. But it's not great news either, and
underscores the difficulty of bringing some of these green technologies
to market.
Zenn, which invested in EEStor earlier this year, currently sells
low-speed electric cars that run on more conventional batteries. These
low-speed cars, which are similar to those made by other small
manufacturers like Miles Automotive, are designed for campuses and
retirement communities. The U.S. Department of Defense has also launched
a program to buy a significant number of low-speed vehicles.
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