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November 20, 2008 4:17 PM PST

SF Bay Area vies to be country's electric vehicle capital

by Kara Tsuboi
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The San Francisco Bay Area is a region already well known for its fabulous food, innovative technology, and breathtaking beauty. In the coming years, we could add one more thing to the list: electric vehicles.

On Thursday, the mayors of San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose held a press conference at San Francisco's city hall to announce their ambitious goal of turning the Bay Area into the electric vehicle capital of the country. Here are details of the nine-point plan that will launch in December, as released by the San Francisco Mayor's office:

  • Expedited permitting and installation of electric vehicle charging outlets at homes, businesses, parking lots, and other buildings throughout the Bay Area;

  • Incentives for employers to install EV charging systems in their workplaces and provide similar incentives to parking facilities and other locations where EV charging stations can be installed;

  • Harmonize local regulations and standards across the region that govern EV infrastructure to achieve regulatory consistency for EV companies as well as expanded range for EV consumers;

  • Establish common government programs that promote the purchase of EVs;

  • Link EV programs and infrastructure to regional transit and air quality programs;

  • Establish programs for aggressive pooled-purchase orders for EVs in municipal, state government, and private sector fleets, and future commitment of purchasing preference for EV vehicles;

  • Expedited permitting and approval for facilities that provide extended-range driving capability for EVs in the region through battery exchange locations or fast-charging;

  • Identify and secure suitable standard (110V) electric outlets for charging low-voltage EVs in every government building in 2009;

  • Identify roll-out plan for placement of 220V EV-charging equipment throughout each city including city parking lots and curbside parking.

Kara is a video reporter for CNET News. She brings her years of broadcast experience and shrewd reporting skills to the CNET TV team. No technology angle is too small or obscure to explore, from major industry news to technology trends to newsmaker interviews. E-mail Kara.
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by trueBlue444 November 21, 2008 4:34 AM PST
Shai Agassi was up to be CEO of SAP but was forced out because so many of his understaff claimed he was arrogant and sold their ideas as his own. The guy is a salesman who gets everybody amped up and does not always deliver. People that have worked a Better Place thought there was lots of hot air and no substance. The guy does not have any patents and is claiming other people's intellectual property for which he has not paid any licensing fees. SAP may even come after him for using derivatives of their code. He is not to be trusted.
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