A file picture shows a man with his electric car at a charging station at the first electric vehicle demonstration centre, built by Better Place, in Ramat Hasharon near Tel Aviv.
JERUSALEM: Israel’s trailblazing electric car company Better Place announced yesterday that it is shutting down, less than six years after unveiling an ambitious plan that promised to revolutionize the auto industry by reducing the world’s dependency on oil.
Better Place was perhaps Israel’s best known clean-tech company and a leading symbol of its “startup” nation status. Israel, along with Denmark, was the company’s test market for developing nationwide networks of charging and battery-swapping stations that it hoped would eventually spread globally. But the company experienced repeated delays in getting off the ground and experienced weak demand for its cars after burning through millions of dollars.
The announcement that the company was filing for liquidation comes less than eight months after company founder Shai Agassi was forced out. The project won the support of Israeli President Shimon Peres, received generous financial incentives from the Israeli government and made Agassi a dynamic celebrity CEO.
In a written statement, the company’s Board of Directors said the venture’s intentions were still valid but the execution had faults along the way. “This is a very sad day for all of us. We stand by the original vision as formulated by Shai Agassi of creating a green alternative that would lessen our dependence on highly polluting transportation technologies,” the company said. “Unfortunately, the path to realizing that vision was difficult, complex and littered with obstacles, not all of which we were able to overcome.”
Better Place raised some $850m from investors like General Electric Co. and HSBC Holdings PLC and the European Investment Bank. Israel Corp., controlled by billionaire Idan Ofer, was the largest shareholder in the venture. AP