Bolloré and Pininfarina have agreed a
50-50 joint venture to manufacture a car that will be 100% electric
and sold under the Pininfarina brand. The electric car, which
will be manufactured by Pininfarina in Italy, will benefit from the
vast expertise gained by Pininfarina in the design and production of
top-of-the-range automobiles and will be equipped with a
revolutionary Lithium Metal Polymer battery developed by the Bolloré
Group.
Bolloré, a French Group founded in
1822, has revenues in excess of 6 billion euros and 32,000 employees
worldwide. As a result of its diversification strategy, it has
operations in industry and in the transportation and media sectors.
The Bolloré Group has significant holdings in Havas, Aegis,
Mediobanca and Vallourec. Building on the technologies it developed
over 30 years as the world’s leading manufacturer of components for
capacitors, it has now developed an innovative battery.
Founded in 1930, the Pininfarina
Group is based in Italy and has more than 3,000 employees a
facilities throughout the world. Today, it is a leading supplier of
automotive services, offering carmakers creative solutions based on
proprietary knowhow at every step of design, product and process
engineering and of niche vehicle manufacturing. Its Italian plants
can produce up to 60,000 cars a year (and up to 20,000 cars a year
in its Sweden plant).
Because the car that Bolloré and
Pininfarina plan to develop and manufacture jointly will be 100%
electric, it will produce 0% carbon dioxide emissions. It will have
four seats and will be equipped with a battery that will provide it
with a range of 250 km in city driving. This battery, which is the
product of 15 years of research, combines the benefit of high energy
density with an exceptionally long life, enabling the vehicles it
powers to run for more than 200,000 km.
The Lithium Metal Polymer
technology is an all-solid technology. No liquid is required, which
eliminates the danger of spills that could cause overheating or
fires. The stability of the materials used contribute to the
battery’s safety, with a battery combustion temperature above 200
degrees centigrade and no possibility of explosion. This technology,
which was developed as a world exclusive by the Bolloré Group, has a
critical advantage over the Lithium Ion technology. Moreover, each
battery cell is protected electronically by passive and active
systems that monitor on an ongoing basis its operating efficiency
and the voltage and temperature of each element. The various cells
are encased in a steel container that protects them from external
agents.
Thanks to the battery’s large
capacity, the Pininfarina electric car will have a very fast
standing start (zero to 50 km/h in 4.9 seconds), sufficient
acceleration to overtake other vehicles safely and a top speed of
130 km/h. It will also be fully automatic.
The battery can be recharged by
plugging it into a standard home electrical outlet. A full charge
will take about five hours, but a five-minute charge will be enough
for a 25 km run. A number of roadside recharging electrical outlets
already exist in some of the world’s major cities. As sales
increase, more will be installed by city governments, service
stations and parking facilities.
The Pininfarina electric car will
be sold concurrently in Europe, the United States and Japan to start
by 2010.
Production capacity, which will
depend on the number of batteries that the Bolloré Group will be
able to manufacture at its plants in Brittany (Ergué-Gaberic) and
Canada (Montreal), should be sufficient to deliver up to 15,000 cars
a year. Obviously, if markets requests exceed this limit, battery
production will be increased.