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By Ben Oliver
First Drives
10 July 2009 16:51
Under the skin of the Renault Kangoo Be Bop ZE electric car, four rather more significant cars are lurking. Starting from 2011, Renault plans to introduce a range of at least four electric vehicles, all of which will share the drivetrain powering this concept car, which we tested on public roads near Paris. There will be a Kangoo van and a Megane saloon first, followed in 2012 by an electric Clio and a bespoke, electric-only two-seat city car, and possibly a passenger Kangoo too.
Renault says you’ll be able to buy one for the price of an equivalent top-end diesel – though you’ll need to lease the battery separately – and that it will make a profit on them.
Judging by this concept, it’s certainly getting closer. The range from the 250kg lithium-ion battery pack is just 60 miles now, but Renault promises 100 miles by 2011. While it’s true that this covers the average daily needs of the vast majority of drivers, it’s also true that the vast majority of us occasionally need to drive much further in a day, so for now, these will remain second cars for most of us.
Charge time is eight hours with a standard domestic power supply, or 4 hours with a 32A supply, and Renault is developing fast-charge stations for office and public car parks which can give an 80% charge in 30 minutes, or 20 miles’ of juice in five minutes.
It’s also working on a fully-automated fast-swap battery system, in which you drive into something that looks like a car wash and have your depleted battery exchanged for a fresh one in three minutes. The batteries sit in the floor so load space isn’t affected.
To make it affordable, you’ll buy or lease your electric Renault for the price of a top-end diesel. You’ll lease the batteries under a separate deal, likely to be upwards of £100 per month, though this includes the cost of replacement when the battery reaches the end of its life. But even when you include this in your running costs, Renault claims the low price of electricity and high price of petrol and diesel means you’ll make a worthwhile saving if you’re doing over 8000 miles per year.
The high-mileage drivers who would really benefit will be hamstrung by the cars’ limited range, and many of the low-mileage urban drivers Renault is targeting might not get to this break-even point, but for a significant number of drivers in between, electric cars ought to make both economic and environmental sense.
>> Click ‘Next’ to see how Renault’s electric car drives on the road
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Renault Kangoo Be Bop ZE (2009) electric car review
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joehammer says
Re: Renault Kangoo Be Bop ZE (2009) electric car review
Hi, Those who are interested in sustainable mobility may visit http://www.sustainable.mobility.org. You will find case studies, news as well as a “worldwide initiatives” section in terms of transport…
Hi,
Those who are interested in sustainable mobility may visit http://www.sustainable.mobility.org. You will find case studies, news as well as a “worldwide initiatives” section in terms of transport…
20 January 2010 12:50
Gregg218 says
RE: Renault Kangoo Be Bop ZE (2009) electric car review
The battery tech will be bought in so that should take car of the reliability and I would presume it will be similar to what sister Nissan has so that is the Nipponese stamp of approval. I think the biggest issue will be the idea of continuing to pay for a car one month via the battery lease rather than the incremental amount one does when at the petrol station. Also, by paying it to the manufacturer, there is always going to be that sense that the vehicle truly isn't "yours." For the majority of people it will fulfill their needs if not their wants. I know that I would rather have an old banger for battling the traffic in Paris and its environs (or any major city for that matter) which is recycling in its purest form.
13 July 2009 18:07
nic325 says
HA Ha Ha Ha!!! Back up plan not required anymore, thanks!!
13 July 2009 14:54
JohnnyBimmer says
Yes that's half the reason BMW drivers are in tears when they see one of you muppets in a wheelie bin. We're part-funding your bankrupt un-eco-viable existence. Thankfully the homour value helps us through life and knowing even free lunches do run out eventually (hope you've a back up plan)
13 July 2009 14:47
JB, you may well be laughing at my next Sesame Street car, but something to bear in mind when you purchase your next BMW. You will be funding both it and my weekend toy. Who is the Muppet now.
13 July 2009 14:40
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