/ 17 December 2008

Financial gloom puts breaks on electric-car rollout

Despite a winning and timely concept amid global climate concerns, Norwegian electric carmaker Think may see its dreams come to a screeching halt due to a lack of financing.

Only two months after it launched production of its hitherto sole model, the Think City, the company has decided to temporarily lay-off more than half of its 200 employees until the end of January.

It is in dire need of cash to pay suppliers, who are exercising caution and demanding up-front payment, and has asked the Norwegian government for a line of credit, loan guarantees or a capital injection in exchange for a stake in the company.

But to no avail, so far.

“We are in a very serious situation,” the group’s Australian chief executive Richard Canny — a recent defector from beleaguered US carmaker Ford — told reporters.

“Think’s growth has been affected by the global financial crisis with our ability to raise fresh capital severely impacted,” he said.

The Norwegian carmaker, once owned by Ford, is small but ambitious: it aims to become the world leader in electric cars.

In 2009, it plans to double its annual production capacity to 10 000 vehicles and conquer new markets.

The compact, plastic two-seater with neat lines, a maximum speed of 110km/h and a range of 180km, is only rolling on Oslo roads for now.

The Norwegian capital is ideal for the small car, with its relatively numerous recharging stations and regulations that offer electric-car drivers the use of public transport lanes, free parking and free passage in toll areas.

But Think also planned to roll into other European cities next year, starting with Scandinavian neighbours Copenhagen and Stockholm, and was set to decide in 2009 whether to take on the North American market.

“Without fresh capital, we cannot continue our expansion plans,” Canny lamented.

Contrary to the big three carmakers in the United States — Chrysler, Ford and General Motors — who cannot find buyers for their fuel-guzzling models, Think’s problem is not a lack of buyers but a lack of financing for production.

According to Norwegian media reports, the group, which has gone bankrupt twice in its 18 tumultuous years of existence, needs some $40-million dollars.

Its latest woes are a heavy blow for Think’s workers, many of whom are former Saab or Volvo employees who have fled the embattled car industry in neighbouring Sweden for what they believed was the carmaker of the future.

On the assembly line at the company’s plant in Aurskog, some 50km east of Oslo, at least 60% of the workers are Swedes.

“In the past few weeks I’ve received an unbelievable number of applications from Sweden,” plant foreman Arne Degermosse, himself a Swede, said.

A Swede of Egyptian origin, Shady Elghobary, is one of those who has crossed the border from Sweden to Norway, leaving behind his wife and two-year-old child in Saab’s hometown of Trollhaettan, to work in Aurskog, returning to visit his family in Sweden on weekends.

“I came here two months ago when we found out that my former employer Saab was going to cut jobs,” he said, just days before Think announced its plans for temporary lay-offs.

“I have no choice. I have to work to support my family,” he said. — AFP