Tata and Chrysler's GEM plan electric delivery vehicle
Filed under: EV/Plug-in, Chrysler, GEM, NEV (Neighborhood Electric Vehicle), India, USA

Way back in January, rumors began swirling regarding a potential tie-up between Chrysler's GEM and India's Tata Motors. The rumored love-child was an electric version of the delivery truck known in India as the Tata Ace. Now, we have a potential price for the unit, and it sounds almost too good to be true. According to Auto Observer, the electric Ace could sell for as little as $5,000 and would meet all necessary safety regulations in the United States. We'd imagine that this vehicle would be classified as a NEV, which would limit it to twenty-five miles per hour and operation on streets with a speed limit of 35 miles per hour or less.
No details are available regarding what kind of batteries or range are available. We can see a small delivery vehicle which uses no gasoline going over rather well in dense urban areas. Sales possibilities exist in both the U.S. market as well as in India.
[Source: Auto Observer]




Is the sudden interest in neighborhood electric vehicles (NEV) good for EV movement? Are they helping advance the technology needed to introduce mainstream consumers to EVs? Is there really a strong market for $10,000 or $15,000 grocery getters and industrial-yard security cruisers? 

For those of you in need of
electric transportation and with a large family, or a lot of friends, Global Electric Motorcars, a DaimlerChrysler
company, is launching production of an all-new six passenger electric vehicle, to join its lineup of two and four
passenger versions. GEM is the top-selling street-legal all-electric vehicle in the United States, and the company is
expending its operations, with new distributors in Western Europe. While these might be zero-emission vehicles in the
strict sense, people should consider a more environmentally friendly way of getting around the neighborhood: walking.










