WELL, WE ALL SHARE COMMON
SENSE DON'T WE?
General Motors has been at the center of one of
the nation's largest controversies over clean
emissions-cars. In 1996 the company introduced the EV-1
electric car in California and Arizona. Hundreds of the
electric cars were soon on the road. Then they all
disappeared. The mystery behind their disappearance is
the subject of the documentary Who Killed the
Electric Car? Were joined by the films
director Chris Paine, and Chelsea Sexton, a former GM
employee who worked on the EV-1 electric car. [rush
transcript included]
In the San Francisco Bay Area, environmentalists are
planning to hold a clean car rally on Saturday as part of
the Step it Up day of action. The rally will feature
plug-in hybrid cars, bio-diesel conversions, solar buses
and electric cars. A clean car caravan is scheduled to
travel to the General Motors dealership in Marin.
Activists plan to call on GM to plug in hybrids, not
hummers. It wont be the first time protests have
occurred outside a GM dealership in California. General
Motors has been at the center of one of the nation's
largest controversies over clean emissions-cars.
In 1996 the company introduced the EV-1 electric car
in California and Arizona. Hundreds of the electric cars
were soon on the road. Then they all disappeared. The
mystery behind their disappearance is the subject of the
documentary Who Killed the Electric Car?
In a moment the film's director Chris Paine and a
former General Motors employee, Chelsea Sexton will join
us. But first we play an excerpt from the film.
- Excerpt of Who Killed the Electric Car?
Despite the praise from drivers, General Motors
stopped manufacturing the cars and forced all drivers to
return their EV-1s. GM was able to do this because none
of the cars had actually been sold, only leased. After
the electric cars were removed from the road they were
sent to Arizona where they were crushed. The films
director Chris Paine joins us in our firehouse studio
today. And in Los Angeles we are joined by Chelsea
Sexton, she is a former General Motors employee who
worked on the EV-1 electric car. She is now the executive
director of Plug In America.
- Chris Paine. Director of the documentary
Who Killed the Electric Car?
- Chelsea Sexton. Former General Motors
employee who worked on the EV-1 electric car. She
is now the executive director of Plug In America.
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
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JUAN GONZALEZ: In the San Francisco Bay Area,
environmentalists are planning to hold a clean car rally
on Saturday as part of the Step It Up day of
action. The rally will feature plug-in hybrid cars,
biodiesel conversion, solar buses, and electric cars. A
clean car caravan is scheduled to travel to the General
Motors dealership in Marin. Activists plan to call on GM
to plug in hybrids not hummers. It won't be the first
time protests have occurred outside a GM dealership in
California. General motors has been at the center of one
of the nation's largest controversies over clean
emissions cars.
AMY GOODMAN: In 1996 the company introduced the
EV-1 electric car in California and Arizona. Hundreds of
the electric cars were soon on the road, then they all
disappeared. The mystery behind their disappearance is
the subject of a documentary Who Killed the Electric
Car. In a moment the films Director, Chris
Paine and former General Motors employee and now
whistleblower, Chelsea Sexton will join us, but first
lets play an excerpt of the film.
- CHELSEA SEXTON: The car was so fast it
looked like it would outrun its own shadow.
TEST
DRIVER: Awesome car to drive.
GREG HANSSEN: It was the crest of a
wave that we thought was coming in. It was the
new thing that was going to change the way
everybody travels.
NARRATOR: Other car companies began to
comply, often with conversions of gas cars, but
with many of the same advantages of the EV-1.
ALEXANDRA PAUL: I'm not mechanical at
all and I love dealing with my electric car
because it's so easy. I plug it in at night and
when I need to drive it, I unplug and drive it
away.
J. KAREN THOMAS: Theyre for
people who love the environment.
COLETTE DIVINE: I say they are just for
people who love cars. They are for people who
have to go somewhere.
TOM HANKS: Well, this is amazing. What
you do with this electric car Dave, is put the
key in and turn it, and then there is this thing
on the floor called the pedal, a pedal.
WALLY E. RIPPEL: The exciting thing
about this, is that the cost of operating the car
is the same as if you were driving a typical
gasoline car, but the gasoline only costs 60
cents a gallon.
CHELSEA SEXTON: Going to the gas
station is a hassle believe it or not. Plugging
the car in, is not.
TOM HANKS: The battery you charge at
home. It gets between 70 and 80-miles per charge,
which for me is more than all the driving I need
to do in the course of a day.
GREG HANSSEN: People started seeing the
cars on the road and getting a better
understanding of what they could do. Friends and
neighbors and relatives started saying hey that's
a neat idea, I should get one of those, we
started see the momentum building for this, and
the waiting lists being created for these cars.
J. KAREN THOMAS: Cut two.
COLETTE DIVINE: Cut two. I go on-line
to look for other Toyota rav4s and I see Toyota
rav4 EV. I say what's that? Click. Wow, my whole
world opened up. This is an electric vehicle, it
goes 100-miles to the charge, blah, blah, blah. I
didn't know this existed. I didn't know this was
a possibility. How come I dont know about
this? Have you seen this on TV?
DOUG KORTHOF: When I first tried to buy
the Honda EV-Plus, I drove in it and I said hey
this is a great car. I said Ill take it.
The person that was trying to sell it to us was
dumbfounded. He didnt know what to do. He
had never leased one before, didn't know how to
do it and it took me six weeks of negotiations
before I was able to get the car from their
hands.
PETER HORTON: There's nothing like
driving a car when you realize as you are sitting
in traffic there's no pollution coming out of
your tailpipe.
DAVID LETTERMAN: By driving an electric
car, what are you sparing us from?
TOM HANKS: Im saving America,
Dave. That's what I am doing, I am saving America
by driving electric cars.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Tom Hanks speaking on the
David Letterman Show. Despite the praise from drivers,
General Motors stopped manufacturing the cars and forced
all drivers to return their EV-1s. GM was able to
do this because none of the cars had actually been sold,
only leased. After the electric cars were removed from
the road they were sent to Arizona where they were
crushed.
- CHRIS PAINE: We flew over at General
Motors and looking down, we could see right next
to the racetrack where the EV-1 was first tested,
we saw maybe 50 EV-1s, crushed and put on
top of semi flatbeds right next to the yellow
crusher. General motors is almost finished off I
think. I don't imagine there's many EV-1s
left that haven't been crushed out. Its
pretty sad.
DAVE BARTHMUSS: There's one
of four things that will happen with the EV-1s.
They will go to colleges and universities,
engineering schools. Theyll go to museums
and other displays across the country. Other EV-1
vehicles are being driven by our engineers and
the other option for EV-1s at the end of
their life is recycling. But know that every part
of the EV-1 is going to be recycled, dismantled
through a third party and then reused. Everything
is going to be recycled, we are not just going to
crush it and send it off to a landfill.
JIM BOYD: When I saw the picture of the
pile of crushed cars, it hurt and I, you know, I
thought it was pretty spiteful.
IRIS OVSHINSKY: To see on the computer,
on the internet, that the crushed EV-1s that GM
did it was tragic.
STANFORD OVSHINSKY: It was wrong. It
was wrong, but more wrong is the reason for it.
CHELSEA SEXTON: All the sudden we were
sort of left at odds. You know, what do we do
now? At the time most of this was going on, no
one had any idea that every automaker was going
to jump ship.
NARRATOR: More internet tips revealed
that the EV-1s were not the only electric
vehicles in jeopardy. A number Ford Thinks and
Ranger electric trucks were discovered in Palm
Springs and rumored to be set for destruction. In
Los Angeles activists spotted a truck load of
Toyota Rav4 EVs. Fearing the destination
was a crushing facility they chased it. The next
morning the truck turned back.
LINDA NICHOLES: That guy was going as
fast as he possibly could in a big transport like
that. He was trying to lose us, it was clear, but
wasnt able to do it and that did change
Toyotas plan, it was so inconsistent. They
didn't now what the hell to do.
DOUG KORTHOF: Then he goes to the end
of the pier and these two big security guards
come out. They opened this locked gate. The truck
goes inside and then the security guards come out
and surveil us.
LINDA NICHOLES: Somehow we ended up at
this god forsaken place.
DOUG KORTHOF: This has everything. It
has spewing smoke into the harbor that kids have
to breathe. It has an oil well and it has Toyota,
which is supposed to be the greenest car company,
but which is simultaneously crushing, and hiding
the fact they are crushing, clean rav4 EVs,
instead of selling them to willing customers.
NARRATOR: No one had seen Hondas
electric cars since they were taken to customers.
Then an episode of Californias Green
aired on PBS.
HUELL HOWSER: So, were gonna be
able to see cars shredded today.
WORKER AT FACILITY: Absolutely.
HUELL HOWSER: Which is not something
most of us get to see.
WORKER AT FACILITY: We shred about a
car a minute. 1,000 cars a day, on a good day.
HUELL HOWSER: And whats
interesting, the first thing we noticed when we
drove up here, you are going to be shredding some
new cars here too. These look like perfectly good
cars, why are you shredding them up?
WORKER AT FACILITY: Little bit of a
mystery really. Since I have been here the last
eight years. They bring us these cars from the
dealerships, and they say they are test cars and
they have been brought over to test various
emissions and the insurance companies won't
reinsure them so they have to watch them be
destroyed here.
HUELL HOWSER: That seems like a shame.
WORKER AT FACILITY: Its a
terribly shame.
HUELL HOWSER: I would like to drive off
in one of these things. Ladies and gentlemen
that's the sound of a crushed automobile being
shredded into a million pieces.
CHELSEA SEXTON: There's no precedent
for car company rounding up one of a particular
type of car and crushing them as if they are
afraid one might get away.
S. DAVID FREEMAN: I think they wanted
to be sure that none of them were driving around
the streets any more to remind people that there
is such a thing as an electric car.
AMY GOODMAN: David Freeman is Energy Adviser to
the Carter Administration, from the documentary Who
Killed the Electric Car. The films director
Chris Paine joins us in our firehouse studio, in Los
Angeles and we are joined by Chelsea Sexton. Yes she is
the whistle-blower, the former General Motors employee
who worked on the EV-1 electric car, now Executive
Director of Plug In America. We welcome you both
to Democracy Now!.
Chelsea Sexton, you must have been shocked when you
thought you were just doing your job for General Motors,
selling EV-1 cars or pushing them out to the public, and
yet, describe what happened when you actually did that?
CHELSEA SEXTON: Well it was sort of interesting
because we were hired to create a market and get these
cars on the road. Through a series of small steps along
the way we became really aware that that was not really
what General Motors and the other a auto manufacturers in
fact, wanted to happen. The more we did it, the more
liability we became. There was an organization of
factions. Some people to this day really loved that
little car and some people in General Motors never wanted
to see it happen, there was a bit of a power struggle
going on in the company.
AMY GOODMAN: Chris Paine why did you do the
film?
CHRIS PAINE: I had driven that EV-1 for five
years and I had just a terrific experience. I got an
electric car as kind of a notion I tried out. Within
about two months, it was the only car I was driving. My
gas car was sort of in the background for emergency days
when I needed to go on long trips. And in that five years
I don't think I needed service once. And so, all you do
is plug it in at night and every day you go 60-miles. If
you really need to go farther, you have your gas car.
When they announced they were taking the cars away,
well, why? Could I buy it? They wouldn't let you buy it,
it was only a lease option. And we all tried to hold onto
our cars, and the car companies said no. It wasn't just
GM, it was Toyota, and Ford, they all said you can't keep
the electric cars. And we thought of everything we could
do including -- maybe we should steal the cars. And we
thought no, thats not what this is about. So, we
thought well, we have to tell the story, because the
public press version of the story was that nobody wants
electric cars and there's no demand and we went that's
not true. That is not the whole story. So let's go get
the story and see what happens.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, if it was all of the car
companies doing it at the same time, that would suggest
there was some kind of policy decision or collusion on
their parts all to reach the same goal.
CHRIS PAINE: You know, the only reason that the
cars ever hit the roads is because California told car
makers if they wanted to sell gas cars they also had to
sell some electric cars and they enforced it through a
mandate. And it was a very good mandate. Because electric
cars had been trying to come into the market place for a
long time and for new technology like electric cars, or
biodiesel, or anything to really get a foothold you need
to have government pressure on vested interests.
And in this case the vested interests being the
internal combustion engine car companies and the oil
companies. So they put this pressure on and the car
companies fought it for, really, what, Chelsea, 12 years?
Something like that.
CHELSEA SEXTON: Yeah.
CHRIS PAINE: And they finally buckled and as
soon as they buckled the car companies took the cars off
the road and then, unbelievably, they destroyed them.
AMY GOODMAN: You have scenes and Chelsea Sexton
you are intimately involved with the whole film, you are
one of the stars of the film if you will. Mel Gibson, you
had famous people driving these cars, of course, Tom
Hanks, and others. And you were pushing to get these cars
out there. You were fighting your own employer. Why do
you think the electric car was such a threat to the
company that made it? To General Motors? It's as if you
were fighting the competition, but you were fighting your
employer.
CHELSEA SEXTON: Absolutely. I don't think any
of them expected how popular those little cars would
become. And they thought well make a good show of
this and well get these really enthusiastic kids to
go out there and push this car and theyll never
actually get cars on the road and well be able to
call it a day. And then not only did we run out of cars,
but we had a waiting list of thousands of people and the
cars became their own best advertisement.
And you could sort of see the thought almost ripple
upon the -- across the collective face of the automotive
companies sort of saying what do we do now? And that's
when they started really actively trying to pull back.
The more we created a market for the cars, the more they
considered that a liability because truly their core
products are larger cars, trucks, and SUVs, and so the
more that we showed the benefits of these clean, quiet,
little cars, the more that begged the question: Well what
about the Suburban? The Impala? And some of these less
than clean cars.
AMY GOODMAN: Chelsea I want to go to another
clip of the film, a part of Who Killed the Electric
Car?, that examines the various parties responsible
for killing off the electric car.
- NARRATOR: Oil companies have rarely shied
away from global issues, but why did they lobby
so hard to build public opposition to the
electric car in California?
JIM BOYD: I
find it difficult to rationalize why the oil
industry got so intimately involved in this other
than maybe they saw it as a threat to what I
would call a monopoly they had on providing the
transportation FUEL.
JOSEPH ROMM: There's no question that
people who control the marketplace today, the oil
companies have a strong incentive to discourage
alternatives, except the alternatives that they,
themselves control. You know, just as General
Motors 40, or 50 years ago bought up the trolley
systems and shut them down, the oil companies
have opposed the creation of an electric
infrastructure.
EDWARD H. MURPHY: I differ strongly
with that, we did not kill the electric car. The
petroleum industry did not kill the electric car.
What killed the electric car was antiquated
technology. It's good example, and something that
we should not repeat. An example that we need to
avoid.
WALLY E. RIPPEL: There's still roughly
a trillion barrels worth of oil in the earth's
crust. And if you figure that the average price
of that subsequent oil will be $100 a barrel,
that's $100 trillion worth of business yet to be
done. However, at some point when an alternative
is good enough, people will snap over. That's
what the oil companies fear the most.
NARRATOR: Federal policy has always had
tremendous power to shape the future. As it gave
enormous incentives to buy SUVs, the Federal
government also sued California to stop the
electric car. Some pointed to the influence of
the oil and auto industries.
S. DAVID FREEMAN: They controlled
things in Washington. They, and the automobile
industry. Now they have Andy Card, their former
lobbyist, right there as Chief of Staff in the
White House. And I guess they don't have to pay
lobbyists any more so they are saving a little
money there.
NARRATOR: Andrew Card was Chief of
Staff when the Bush Administration joined the
suit against California. Card had also been
President and CEO of the American Automobile
Manufacturers Association during its campaign
to kill Californias electric car mandate.
JIM BOYD: Industries began to see, if
we don't kill this cancer in California, it's
going to spread to the rest of the country. I
think it became a strategy on the part of many
companies to make it a national issue. I was even
told once by a very prominent Congressman who I
shall not mention by name that I can understand
and tolerate what you are doing in California,
but if you ever try to spread your California
program to the rest of my country, I am going to
have to do battle with you.
AMY GOODMAN: An excerpt of Who Killed the
Electric Car. Juan?
JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, were you able to find if
any electric cars are still on the road?
CHRIS PAINE: Well, there are, you know, thanks
to great protests, about 1,000 cars were saved of the
5,000 cars. So there are a few left in California and
they are coming back.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, we will see what happens
when your film goes around as you speak on your college
tour. Tonight you will be in Princeton and then traveling
the country. Chris Paine, director of the documentary Who
Killed the Electric Car and Chelsea Sexton the
General Motors whistle-blower who thought she was just
doing her job trying to create a market of electric cars,
now Executive Director of Plug In America.
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