Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn with the company's Land Glider electric concept car. Photo / AP
Top executives with more than a dozen companies, including Nissan, FedEx, electric utility PG&E and battery developers A123 Systems and Johnson Controls-Saft, announced the formation of the Electrification Coalition to lay the groundwork for millions of electric cars to reach US highways.
Issuing a lengthy plan to electrify the
The group envisions a network of electric vehicles in six to eight cities in the short term and an expansion across the
"There's no pie-in-the-sky here," said Frederick W. Smith, FedEx's chairman, president and chief executive. "It's simply a matter of organization, a matter of will and a matter of execution."
"Ultimately the consumer will make the judgment about where this country goes, but from the standpoint of public policy we can set the stage for it," said Sen. Byron Dorgan, a Democrat who joined the group for its announcement.
Nissan President and chief executive Carlos Ghosn said the auto industry was working quickly to develop zero-emissions cars in response to concerns about oil security, tighter emissions requirements in the
Ghosn said the world market of 600 million vehicles is expected to expand to 2.5 billion vehicles in 2050 with the growth in vehicle purchasing in developing nations such as
Nissan is releasing the Leaf, an all-electric car, in limited numbers next year and plans to put the vehicle into mass-production globally in 2012.
"The time is right for electric cars - in fact the time is critical," Ghosn said.
The
- AP
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