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Think Global

Think Global was a Norwegian electric car manufacturer located in Bærum, which manufactured cars under the TH!NK brand. Production of the Think City was stopped in March 2011 and the company filed for bankruptcy on June 22, 2011, for the fourth time in 20 years.[1] The company was bought soon after by Electric Mobility Solutions AS and production ceased in August 2012 with no more announcements regarding future production.[2][3][4] As of October 2010, a total of 2,500 units had been manufactured at Oslo-based TH!NK's production facility.[5]

TH!NK Global
FormerlyPersonal Independent Vehicle Company (1991–2006)
Company typePrivate (1991–99)
Subsidiary (1999–2011)
IndustryAutomotive
FoundedDecember 1991
DefunctJune 22, 2011; 12 years ago (2011-06-22)
FateDeclared bankruptcy
Headquarters,
ProductsElectric cars
BrandsThink City
Number of employees
125+
Parent
  • Ford (1999–2003)
  • KamKorp (2003–2006)
  • InSpire (2006–2011)

The Ford TH!NK was a line of electric vehicles produced by TH!NK Mobility, then an enterprise of the Ford Motor Company. The short-lived line included four models: the TH!NK Neighbor and the TH!NK City, small electric automobiles, and the TH!NK Bike Traveler and the TH!NK Bike Fun, electric-powered motorized bicycle. Ford sold its stock, and the resulting company, Think Global, produced electric cars in Norway until declaring bankruptcy in 2011.[6][7][8]

History edit

The company was founded in January 1991 in Bærum, as "Pivco" (for Personal Independent Vehicle Company). The first practical prototype, the PIV2, like the vehicles that followed, were built around a chassis made of aluminum and carrying a body made of polyethylene thermoplastic rotomolded in one piece. The chassis were developed by Hydro Aluminium Tonder in Tønder in Denmark and were one of the main reasons that Ford later acquired 51% of the stock.[9] 10 of 15 prototypes were built in time for the Lillehammer Olympic Winter Games in 1994. The battery technology was NiCd, driving a three-phase AC induction motor via the front wheels.

 
PIV3, the City Bee, launched in 1995

The PIV2 was followed by the PIV3, the City Bee (Citi in the US), introduced in 1995. 120 of these were produced, 40 of which participated in the San Francisco Bay Area Station Car Demonstration project from 1995 to 1998.

Based on the experiences from the prototypes, Pivco then went on to develop their first true production model, PIV4, later called the TH!NK, with Lotus Cars in a consulting role. The basic construction concept from the prototypes was retained, except that the roof was made of ABS plastic, and the lower frame chassis elements were made of steel. The production model had a range of 85 kilometres (53 mi) (modified ECE101 cycle) between charges, and a top speed of 90 km/h (56 mph).[10]

Development took more time and resources than anticipated, so when development of the production model was finished in 1999, finances had dried up. The company was then acquired by Ford, who could start production of the TH!NK City. Ford even embraced the TH!NK concept, and marketed electrically driven bicycles as well as golf carts under the same brand.

The TH!NK city Electric Vehicle (EV) Demonstration Program Project was initiated late 2001, and completed in April 2005. US. Partners include Federal, State and Municipal agencies as well as commercial partners. Phase I, consisted of placement of the vehicles in demonstration programs, and it was completed in 2002. Phase II, the monitoring of these programs was completed in 2004. Phase III, the decommissioning and/or exporting of vehicles concluded in 2005. Phase I - the Program successfully assigned 192 EV's with customers (including Hertz) in the state of California, 109 in New York (including loaner and demo vehicles), 16 in Georgia, 7 to customers outside of the US and 52 in Ford's internal operations in Dearborn, Michigan for a total of 376 vehicles. Phase II – the monitoring of the operational fleet was ongoing and completed in 2004, and all vehicles were returned throughout 2004 and 2005. The Department of Energy (DOE) was involved with the monitoring of the New York Power Authority / TH!NK Clean Commute Program units through partnership with Electric Transportation Engineering Corporation (ETEC), which filed separate reports to DOE. The remainder of the field fleet was monitored through Ford's internal operations. Vehicles were retired from lease operation throughout the program for various operator reasons. Some of the vehicles were involved in re-leasing operations. At the end of the program, 376 vehicles had been involved, 372 of which were available for customer use while 4 were engineering prototype and study vehicles. At the end of leases, City vehicles have been decommissioned and/or exported to KamKorp in Norway. By April 2005, the last of the City vehicles had been returned and processed or exported to Norway.[11]

 
Ford TH!NK in Museum Autovision

Production ceased in 2002, after 1,005 units had been made. Many of these cars participated in station car projects in California and in New York City.

Probably due to changes in the California zero-emissions vehicle policy, Ford gave up THINK on January 31, 2003. The company was sold to KamKorp, owned by Indian businessman Kamal Siddiqi.[12] Development of a successor to the City was subsequently halted. The used cars from US and UK have been re-exported[13] to Norway where they are in high demand due to the government's policy to promote the use of electrical cars (EVs are exempt from taxes, have free parking, pass toll roads for free, and are allowed to drive in the bus lanes avoiding traffic congestion).[citation needed]

A controversy erupted when Ford decided to crush off-lease TH!NK City cars stockpiled in the U.S. After protesting by environmentalist groups, including a Greenpeace rally on the roof of Ford's Norway offices, Ford decided to ship the excess vehicles to Norway.[14]

In 2004, the company turned its attention to development of the TH!NK public, a micro size electric bus to be rented to customers for inner city travel. By February 2006, prototypes of the vehicle had been developed, but the company went into receivership.

At the end of March 2006, Think Nordic was acquired by Norwegian investment group InSpire, which includes the original founder Jan Otto Ringdal and Jan-Olaf Willums - a Norwegian engineer educated at the renowned ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Polytechnic) and expert in Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)- as partners. The company was renamed THINK Global.

For the next year, the THINK website showed a restyled "new THINK City" car which was under development. An open version of the car was also pictured but the company said it had no plans to put it into production.

In March 2007, a completely new website was posted, with many more images of the new car rendered into artist's impressions and various exterior/interior photographs. This site is presented in Norwegian and English.

The original English page reported: "The THINK city has ABS brakes, dual airbags, and meets all European and US safety requirements. It has a range of 170 km (110 mi), a top speed of 100 km/h (62 mph) and has comfort and convenience features such as air conditioning, power steering, sun roof, electric windows and mirrors, and more".

In May 2007, Tesla Motors, maker of the electric Tesla Roadster, announced an agreement to sell 43 million dollars worth of its Li-ion battery systems to THINK Nordic for use in the next generation THINK City,[15][16] but on 2 November 2007 it backed out of the deal.[17]

The THINK assembly line was restarted in late November 2007 to start manufacturing the re-designed City car.[18]

On March 5, 2008, General Electric, battery manufacturer A123 Systems and THINK Global announced that they had entered a partnership to enable global electrification of transportation. GE invested US$4 million in THINK and $20 million in A123 Systems to help A123 roll out batteries for THINK. A123 Systems and THINK at the same time signed a commercial supply agreement. The partnership was announced at the 78th annual international Geneva Motor Show.[19][20][21]

Also at the 2008 Geneva motor show, THINK unveiled its future five-seater, 130 km/h (80 mph) concept car, the TH!NK Ox.[22]

In July 2008, THINK introduced the THINK City for the first time in the UK.[23]

As of August 2008, some 100 City cars had been manufactured for customers in Norway. It was reported that "the lean plant is ready for efficient production supported by the experts of Porsche Consulting".[24]

On December 15, 2008, THINK suspended all vehicle production and laid off 50% of its staff pending negotiation of up to $29 million in funding for working capital, citing "urgent financial distress."[25] [26]

As of January 13, 2009, THINK Global received a bridge loan of 40 million Norwegian kroner (~$5.69 million) to continue operation.[27] Much of that bridge loan came from one of its battery suppliers, EnerDel.

On August 27, 2009, THINK announced a successful recapitalization ($47 million) through existing and new investors, which allowed the company to exit court protection and resume normal business operations in terms of manufacturing and sales of the THINK City EV in Europe. Announced investors included battery manufacturer Ener1 in U.S. (31%); US venture capital firms RockPort Capital Partners (Boston); Element Partners (Philadelphia) and Kleiner Perkins (Palo Alto, CA) as well as Valmet Automotive based in Finland and Investinor (the venture capital sovereign fund of Norway).[28] On the same day, the company also announced that the THINK City electric car would be produced in Valmet later that year. The deal also included engineering. Valmet invested around €3 million ($4.27 million) to the project,[29] and became a minor shareholder of the company.

Production of the THINK City car at Valmet Automotive started on December 10, 2009, in Uusikaupunki, Finland.[30]

On January 5, 2010, THINK announced plans to manufacture the THINK City in Elkhart, Indiana beginning in 2011.[31]

On April 6, 2010, THINK announced plans to begin selling the THINK City in the U.S. in 2010.[32]

December 2010, the first 15 THINK electric cars made in the Elkhart, Indiana, assembly plant were delivered to its customer – the state of Indiana – for government fleet use. This marks the first time that an American-made electric vehicle with Lithium-ion batteries has been purchased for U.S. fleet operation. The vehicles delivered were the THINK City model, which is a pure electric vehicle that produces zero emissions and is capable of traveling as far as 100 miles (160 km) on a single charge.

“Our delivery today is part of a larger effort to help transform the U.S. light-duty vehicle fleet from one that is mostly dependent on imported oil, to one that is fueled entirely by domestically produced electric energy,” said Barry Engle, THINK CEO. Engle continued, “As part of that goal, we've made a strategic decision to target initially the many millions of fleet vehicles in operation in the U.S. market…These fleets can jumpstart vehicle electrification in America's cities and help push the industry past early adopters into mainstream consumer markets.”[33]

Production of the Th!nk City was stopped in March 2011 and the company filed for bankruptcy on June 22, 2011, for the fourth time in 20 years.[1]

Think Global's assets were bought by Electric Mobility Solutions AS in July 2011, including shares of wholly owned subsidiaries THINK North America and THINK UK. The new owners announced that production is scheduled to restart in early 2012 with a refined Think City.[2] However, despite such announcements production ceased in August 2012.[3] In January 2013, an email sent to existing Think City customer included the sentence "For 2013, our focus is on serving our customers, while developing the next model THINK EV." thus hinting that another Think EV is in development.[citation needed]

Models edit

Ford TH!NK City edit

 
Ford TH!NK.

The two door Think City could seat a driver and a passenger and had a top speed of 56 miles per hour (90 km/h). The car had an acceleration speed of zero to 30 miles per hour (48 km/h) in seven seconds and weighed 2,075 pounds. The model was 9.8 feet (3.0 m) long, 5.25 feet (1.60 m) wide, and 5.1 feet (1.6 m) high.[34]

TH!NK Neighbor edit

The Neighbor (part of Ford Th!nk) was designed to meet the NHTSA specification for Neighborhood Electric Vehicles. Design and manufacture was unrelated to the Th!nk City. The Neighbor was initially offered in two models, a two-seater and a four-seater, with a two-passenger utility truck version offered near the end of production. The TH!NK Neighbor had a fixed roof over an open enclosure; a rain cover was optionally available to protect the passengers from the elements. The normal top speed was governed to 25 miles per hour (40 km/h) per NHTSA requirements, and it also had a "turf" mode that set its maximum speed at 15 miles per hour (24 km/h) for golf course use. Many options were designed for use on the golf course: it featured a bag rack, a holder for scorecards, tees, and balls, and a club washer. Additionally, there was a trunk option for the four-passenger version that could double as a cooler. Overall, 7,162 total units were produced for the 2002 model year. 2,268 P20 ( 2 seater), 863 P21 (utility) and 4,031 P22 (4 passenger) units were built.

TH!NK city edit

 
PIV5, Th!nk City electric car.

The Th!nk City was a small two-seater or 2+2-seater[35] highway capable electric car, with a top speed of 110 kilometres per hour (68 mph) and an in-town range of 160 kilometres (99 mi) on a full charge.[23] The Think City is available with either a Zebra Sodium (molten salt battery) battery or a lithium-ion battery, which both travel 100 miles, or 160 kilometres on a full charge, and based on the International Electrotechnical Commission's standards for electric cars.

After a failed start up in Norway in 2008, mass production was restarted in Finland in December 2009.[36]

As of September 2010 the Th!nk City was sold in Norway, the Netherlands, Spain, France, Austria, Switzerland and Finland.[37][38]

It was one of the first three electric cars in the world to be crash-tested and highway-certified, together with the Tesla Roadster (2008) and the Mitsubishi i MiEV.

TH!NK Ox edit

 
Think Ox[39]

The TH!NK Ox, presented at the 2008 Geneva Motor Show, was a concept five-seater electric car with a top speed of 130 km/h (81 mph) and a 100 kW motor.

The website for the Think Ox, now shut down, listed the top speed as 135 km/h (~84 mi/h) and the range as 250 km (~155 mi).

TH!NK open edit

TH!NK open was a 3-door, 2-seat concept car, where the roof has been removed. Top speed is 100 km/h (62 mph), with the following ranges (90 to 203 km):

  • Range IEC (European standard for calculating range of electrical cars): 170 km (summer tires, heater off)
  • Range FUDS (American standard for calculating range of electrical cars): 180 km (summer tires, heater off)
  • Range FUDS winter (typical range in particularly cold conditions) : 90 km /winter tires, constant 4 kW heater
  • Range EU UDC (range during city driving only): 203 km (126 mi)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Douglas A. Bolduc (2011-06-22). "Norwegian EV maker Think files for bankruptcy". Automotive News. Retrieved 2011-06-23.
  2. ^ a b Sebastian Blanco (2011-07-25). "Official: Think Global purchased by Electric Mobility Solutions AS". AutoblogGreen. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  3. ^ a b Ingram, Anthony (2012-08-20). "Last Few Think City Electric Cars Being Finished in Indiana". The Green Car Report. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
  4. ^ Wernau, Julie (2012-02-01). "Focus: Tech bet sours for Elkhart, Ind., as electric carmaker Think, battery firm Ener1 fall into bankruptcy". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
  5. ^ Staff (2010-10-12). "Electric Vehicle Maker Think Builds 2,500th World's Best-Selling City Model". Energy Trend. Retrieved 2016-03-12.
  6. ^ . U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. 2001-09-18. Archived from the original on 2006-06-25. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
  7. ^ "2002 TH!NK Recall, Auto Recall, Safety Problems, vehicle Defects". AutoWorld. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
  8. ^ . A Better Earth. September 2004. Archived from the original on May 12, 2006. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
  9. ^ "3", Ford skal sælge norsk elbil i Danmark, Berlingske Tidende, Erhverv [Ford is going to sell Norwegian electric car in Denmark], 1999-07-01, p. 4
  10. ^ "Automotive Industries Feb. 1999, Gerry Kobe". Findarticles.com. 1999. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  11. ^ "TH!NK city Electric Vehicle Demonstration Program Final Project Report" (PDF). Idaho National Laboratory. 2006-07-15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-14. Retrieved 2016-08-15.
  12. ^ "SEC File 5-39045". Secinfo.com. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  13. ^ greenpeace.org Th!nk Again: Ford Does a U-Turn 2006-06-09 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ . Greenpeace. 2004-09-17. Archived from the original on 2006-06-09. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
  15. ^ teslamotors.com Introducing Tesla Energy Group 2009-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ latimes.com Tesla to supply batteries for electric cars
  17. ^ "greencarcongress.com". greencarcongress.com. 2007-11-02. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  18. ^ "www.think.no". www.think.no. Archived from the original on 2011-08-09. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  19. ^ (Press release). General Electric. 2008-03-05. Archived from the original on 2008-03-18. Retrieved 2016-08-15.
  20. ^ . Think.no. Archived from the original on 2008-12-18. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  21. ^ . A123systems.com. Archived from the original on 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  22. ^ Think Ox . Archived from the original on 2008-12-07. Retrieved 2008-03-21.
  23. ^ a b "New TH!NK city EV Makes UK Show Debut". Worldcarfans. Retrieved 2009-08-27.
  24. ^ Green Wombat[dead link]
  25. ^ . Cnbc.com. Archived from the original on 2015-09-09. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  26. ^ Motavalli, Jim (2008-12-17). "NYTimes Website". Wheels.blogs.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  27. ^ "Sustainable Business". Sustainable Business. 2009-01-13. Retrieved 2010-12-23.
  28. ^ Blanco, Sebastian (2009-08-27). "Think exits bankruptcy, gets $47m for production move to Finland — Autoblog Green". Green.autoblog.com. Retrieved 2010-06-23.
  29. ^ "Metso's Valmet to start making Think electric car". forbes.com. 2009-08-27. Retrieved 2009-08-27.[dead link]
  30. ^ "THINK City production starts at Valmet Automotive". valmet-automotive.com/automotive. Retrieved 2009-12-11.
  31. ^ Martin LaMonica (2010-01-05). . News.cnet.com. Archived from the original on 2011-06-17. Retrieved 2010-06-23.
  32. ^ "THINK to sell City EV in New York, followed by other U.S. cities". Leftlanenews.com. 2010-04-02. Retrieved 2010-06-23.
  33. ^ "Think delivers first U.S. built electric cars". Leftlanenews.com.
  34. ^ . Automotive Design and Production. Archived from the original on 2006-06-19. Retrieved 2006-06-19.
  35. ^ . Thinkev.com. Archived from the original on 2010-12-15. Retrieved 2011-03-24.
  36. ^ Jim Montavalli (2009-12-11). "Think Restarts Production in Finland". New York Times. Retrieved 2010-04-04.
  37. ^ "THINK Begins EV Sales in Finland". Green Car Congress. 2010-09-11. Retrieved 2010-09-12.
  38. ^ Eric Loveday (2010-09-13). "Think kicks off sales of City electric vehicle in Finland". AutoblogGreen. Retrieved 2010-09-14.
  39. ^ . Think.no. Archived from the original on 2010-01-21. Retrieved 2009-08-27.

References edit

  • THINK Invests in New R&D Center in Oslo, EV World, March 30, 2010

External links edit

  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2010-03-01)
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2001-01-24)
  • Wendy Priesnitz (2000-01-12). . Natural Life Magazine. Archived from the original on 2000-08-19. Retrieved 2010-09-13.
  • at TropiCar, Inc.

think, global, charity, charity, environmental, slogan, think, globally, locally, school, school, norwegian, electric, manufacturer, located, bærum, which, manufactured, cars, under, brand, production, think, city, stopped, march, 2011, company, filed, bankrup. For the UK charity see Think Global charity For the environmental slogan see Think globally act locally For the school see Think Global School Think Global was a Norwegian electric car manufacturer located in Baerum which manufactured cars under the TH NK brand Production of the Think City was stopped in March 2011 and the company filed for bankruptcy on June 22 2011 for the fourth time in 20 years 1 The company was bought soon after by Electric Mobility Solutions AS and production ceased in August 2012 with no more announcements regarding future production 2 3 4 As of October 2010 update a total of 2 500 units had been manufactured at Oslo based TH NK s production facility 5 TH NK GlobalFormerlyPersonal Independent Vehicle Company 1991 2006 Company typePrivate 1991 99 Subsidiary 1999 2011 IndustryAutomotiveFoundedDecember 1991DefunctJune 22 2011 12 years ago 2011 06 22 FateDeclared bankruptcyHeadquartersBaerum NorwayProductsElectric carsBrandsThink CityNumber of employees125 ParentFord 1999 2003 KamKorp 2003 2006 InSpire 2006 2011 The Ford TH NK was a line of electric vehicles produced by TH NK Mobility then an enterprise of the Ford Motor Company The short lived line included four models the TH NK Neighbor and the TH NK City small electric automobiles and the TH NK Bike Traveler and the TH NK Bike Fun electric powered motorized bicycle Ford sold its stock and the resulting company Think Global produced electric cars in Norway until declaring bankruptcy in 2011 6 7 8 Contents 1 History 2 Models 2 1 Ford TH NK City 2 2 TH NK Neighbor 2 3 TH NK city 2 4 TH NK Ox 2 5 TH NK open 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThis section appears to be slanted towards recent events Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective and add more content related to non recent events January 2023 This section reads like a press release or a news article and may be largely based on routine coverage Please help improve this article and add independent sources January 2023 The company was founded in January 1991 in Baerum as Pivco for Personal Independent Vehicle Company The first practical prototype the PIV2 like the vehicles that followed were built around a chassis made of aluminum and carrying a body made of polyethylene thermoplastic rotomolded in one piece The chassis were developed by Hydro Aluminium Tonder in Tonder in Denmark and were one of the main reasons that Ford later acquired 51 of the stock 9 10 of 15 prototypes were built in time for the Lillehammer Olympic Winter Games in 1994 The battery technology was NiCd driving a three phase AC induction motor via the front wheels nbsp PIV3 the City Bee launched in 1995 The PIV2 was followed by the PIV3 the City Bee Citi in the US introduced in 1995 120 of these were produced 40 of which participated in the San Francisco Bay Area Station Car Demonstration project from 1995 to 1998 Based on the experiences from the prototypes Pivco then went on to develop their first true production model PIV4 later called the TH NK with Lotus Cars in a consulting role The basic construction concept from the prototypes was retained except that the roof was made of ABS plastic and the lower frame chassis elements were made of steel The production model had a range of 85 kilometres 53 mi modified ECE101 cycle between charges and a top speed of 90 km h 56 mph 10 Development took more time and resources than anticipated so when development of the production model was finished in 1999 finances had dried up The company was then acquired by Ford who could start production of the TH NK City Ford even embraced the TH NK concept and marketed electrically driven bicycles as well as golf carts under the same brand The TH NK city Electric Vehicle EV Demonstration Program Project was initiated late 2001 and completed in April 2005 US Partners include Federal State and Municipal agencies as well as commercial partners Phase I consisted of placement of the vehicles in demonstration programs and it was completed in 2002 Phase II the monitoring of these programs was completed in 2004 Phase III the decommissioning and or exporting of vehicles concluded in 2005 Phase I the Program successfully assigned 192 EV s with customers including Hertz in the state of California 109 in New York including loaner and demo vehicles 16 in Georgia 7 to customers outside of the US and 52 in Ford s internal operations in Dearborn Michigan for a total of 376 vehicles Phase II the monitoring of the operational fleet was ongoing and completed in 2004 and all vehicles were returned throughout 2004 and 2005 The Department of Energy DOE was involved with the monitoring of the New York Power Authority TH NK Clean Commute Program units through partnership with Electric Transportation Engineering Corporation ETEC which filed separate reports to DOE The remainder of the field fleet was monitored through Ford s internal operations Vehicles were retired from lease operation throughout the program for various operator reasons Some of the vehicles were involved in re leasing operations At the end of the program 376 vehicles had been involved 372 of which were available for customer use while 4 were engineering prototype and study vehicles At the end of leases City vehicles have been decommissioned and or exported to KamKorp in Norway By April 2005 the last of the City vehicles had been returned and processed or exported to Norway 11 nbsp Ford TH NK in Museum Autovision Production ceased in 2002 after 1 005 units had been made Many of these cars participated in station car projects in California and in New York City Probably due to changes in the California zero emissions vehicle policy Ford gave up THINK on January 31 2003 The company was sold to KamKorp owned by Indian businessman Kamal Siddiqi 12 Development of a successor to the City was subsequently halted The used cars from US and UK have been re exported 13 to Norway where they are in high demand due to the government s policy to promote the use of electrical cars EVs are exempt from taxes have free parking pass toll roads for free and are allowed to drive in the bus lanes avoiding traffic congestion citation needed A controversy erupted when Ford decided to crush off lease TH NK City cars stockpiled in the U S After protesting by environmentalist groups including a Greenpeace rally on the roof of Ford s Norway offices Ford decided to ship the excess vehicles to Norway 14 In 2004 the company turned its attention to development of the TH NK public a micro size electric bus to be rented to customers for inner city travel By February 2006 prototypes of the vehicle had been developed but the company went into receivership At the end of March 2006 Think Nordic was acquired by Norwegian investment group InSpire which includes the original founder Jan Otto Ringdal and Jan Olaf Willums a Norwegian engineer educated at the renowned ETH Zurich Swiss Federal Polytechnic and expert in Corporate Social Responsibility CSR as partners The company was renamed THINK Global For the next year the THINK website showed a restyled new THINK City car which was under development An open version of the car was also pictured but the company said it had no plans to put it into production In March 2007 a completely new website was posted with many more images of the new car rendered into artist s impressions and various exterior interior photographs This site is presented in Norwegian and English The original English page reported The THINK city has ABS brakes dual airbags and meets all European and US safety requirements It has a range of 170 km 110 mi a top speed of 100 km h 62 mph and has comfort and convenience features such as air conditioning power steering sun roof electric windows and mirrors and more In May 2007 Tesla Motors maker of the electric Tesla Roadster announced an agreement to sell 43 million dollars worth of its Li ion battery systems to THINK Nordic for use in the next generation THINK City 15 16 but on 2 November 2007 it backed out of the deal 17 The THINK assembly line was restarted in late November 2007 to start manufacturing the re designed City car 18 On March 5 2008 General Electric battery manufacturer A123 Systems and THINK Global announced that they had entered a partnership to enable global electrification of transportation GE invested US 4 million in THINK and 20 million in A123 Systems to help A123 roll out batteries for THINK A123 Systems and THINK at the same time signed a commercial supply agreement The partnership was announced at the 78th annual international Geneva Motor Show 19 20 21 Also at the 2008 Geneva motor show THINK unveiled its future five seater 130 km h 80 mph concept car the TH NK Ox 22 In July 2008 THINK introduced the THINK City for the first time in the UK 23 As of August 2008 some 100 City cars had been manufactured for customers in Norway It was reported that the lean plant is ready for efficient production supported by the experts of Porsche Consulting 24 On December 15 2008 THINK suspended all vehicle production and laid off 50 of its staff pending negotiation of up to 29 million in funding for working capital citing urgent financial distress 25 26 As of January 13 2009 THINK Global received a bridge loan of 40 million Norwegian kroner 5 69 million to continue operation 27 Much of that bridge loan came from one of its battery suppliers EnerDel On August 27 2009 THINK announced a successful recapitalization 47 million through existing and new investors which allowed the company to exit court protection and resume normal business operations in terms of manufacturing and sales of the THINK City EV in Europe Announced investors included battery manufacturer Ener1 in U S 31 US venture capital firms RockPort Capital Partners Boston Element Partners Philadelphia and Kleiner Perkins Palo Alto CA as well as Valmet Automotive based in Finland and Investinor the venture capital sovereign fund of Norway 28 On the same day the company also announced that the THINK City electric car would be produced in Valmet later that year The deal also included engineering Valmet invested around 3 million 4 27 million to the project 29 and became a minor shareholder of the company Production of the THINK City car at Valmet Automotive started on December 10 2009 in Uusikaupunki Finland 30 On January 5 2010 THINK announced plans to manufacture the THINK City in Elkhart Indiana beginning in 2011 31 On April 6 2010 THINK announced plans to begin selling the THINK City in the U S in 2010 32 December 2010 the first 15 THINK electric cars made in the Elkhart Indiana assembly plant were delivered to its customer the state of Indiana for government fleet use This marks the first time that an American made electric vehicle with Lithium ion batteries has been purchased for U S fleet operation The vehicles delivered were the THINK City model which is a pure electric vehicle that produces zero emissions and is capable of traveling as far as 100 miles 160 km on a single charge Our delivery today is part of a larger effort to help transform the U S light duty vehicle fleet from one that is mostly dependent on imported oil to one that is fueled entirely by domestically produced electric energy said Barry Engle THINK CEO Engle continued As part of that goal we ve made a strategic decision to target initially the many millions of fleet vehicles in operation in the U S market These fleets can jumpstart vehicle electrification in America s cities and help push the industry past early adopters into mainstream consumer markets 33 Production of the Th nk City was stopped in March 2011 and the company filed for bankruptcy on June 22 2011 for the fourth time in 20 years 1 Think Global s assets were bought by Electric Mobility Solutions AS in July 2011 including shares of wholly owned subsidiaries THINK North America and THINK UK The new owners announced that production is scheduled to restart in early 2012 with a refined Think City 2 However despite such announcements production ceased in August 2012 3 In January 2013 an email sent to existing Think City customer included the sentence For 2013 our focus is on serving our customers while developing the next model THINK EV thus hinting that another Think EV is in development citation needed Models editFord TH NK City edit nbsp Ford TH NK See also Ford Think City The two door Think City could seat a driver and a passenger and had a top speed of 56 miles per hour 90 km h The car had an acceleration speed of zero to 30 miles per hour 48 km h in seven seconds and weighed 2 075 pounds The model was 9 8 feet 3 0 m long 5 25 feet 1 60 m wide and 5 1 feet 1 6 m high 34 TH NK Neighbor edit The Neighbor part of Ford Th nk was designed to meet the NHTSA specification for Neighborhood Electric Vehicles Design and manufacture was unrelated to the Th nk City The Neighbor was initially offered in two models a two seater and a four seater with a two passenger utility truck version offered near the end of production The TH NK Neighbor had a fixed roof over an open enclosure a rain cover was optionally available to protect the passengers from the elements The normal top speed was governed to 25 miles per hour 40 km h per NHTSA requirements and it also had a turf mode that set its maximum speed at 15 miles per hour 24 km h for golf course use Many options were designed for use on the golf course it featured a bag rack a holder for scorecards tees and balls and a club washer Additionally there was a trunk option for the four passenger version that could double as a cooler Overall 7 162 total units were produced for the 2002 model year 2 268 P20 2 seater 863 P21 utility and 4 031 P22 4 passenger units were built TH NK city edit Main article Th nk City nbsp PIV5 Th nk City electric car The Th nk City was a small two seater or 2 2 seater 35 highway capable electric car with a top speed of 110 kilometres per hour 68 mph and an in town range of 160 kilometres 99 mi on a full charge 23 The Think City is available with either a Zebra Sodium molten salt battery battery or a lithium ion battery which both travel 100 miles or 160 kilometres on a full charge and based on the International Electrotechnical Commission s standards for electric cars After a failed start up in Norway in 2008 mass production was restarted in Finland in December 2009 36 As of September 2010 the Th nk City was sold in Norway the Netherlands Spain France Austria Switzerland and Finland 37 38 It was one of the first three electric cars in the world to be crash tested and highway certified together with the Tesla Roadster 2008 and the Mitsubishi i MiEV TH NK Ox edit nbsp Think Ox 39 The TH NK Ox presented at the 2008 Geneva Motor Show was a concept five seater electric car with a top speed of 130 km h 81 mph and a 100 kW motor The website for the Think Ox now shut down listed the top speed as 135 km h 84 mi h and the range as 250 km 155 mi TH NK open edit TH NK open was a 3 door 2 seat concept car where the roof has been removed Top speed is 100 km h 62 mph with the following ranges 90 to 203 km Range IEC European standard for calculating range of electrical cars 170 km summer tires heater off Range FUDS American standard for calculating range of electrical cars 180 km summer tires heater off Range FUDS winter typical range in particularly cold conditions 90 km winter tires constant 4 kW heater Range EU UDC range during city driving only 203 km 126 mi See also editElectric car Electric car use by country List of modern production plug in electric vehicles Plug in electric vehicle Plug in electric vehicles in NorwayNotes edit a b Douglas A Bolduc 2011 06 22 Norwegian EV maker Think files for bankruptcy Automotive News Retrieved 2011 06 23 a b Sebastian Blanco 2011 07 25 Official Think Global purchased by Electric Mobility Solutions AS AutoblogGreen Retrieved 2011 08 01 a b Ingram Anthony 2012 08 20 Last Few Think City Electric Cars Being Finished in Indiana The Green Car Report Retrieved 2012 08 22 Wernau Julie 2012 02 01 Focus Tech bet sours for Elkhart Ind as electric carmaker Think battery firm Ener1 fall into bankruptcy Chicago Tribune Retrieved 2012 08 22 Staff 2010 10 12 Electric Vehicle Maker Think Builds 2 500th World s Best Selling City Model Energy Trend Retrieved 2016 03 12 CSPC TH NK Mobility Recall Electrically Assisted Bicycles U S Consumer Product Safety Commission 2001 09 18 Archived from the original on 2006 06 25 Retrieved 2006 06 18 2002 TH NK Recall Auto Recall Safety Problems vehicle Defects AutoWorld Retrieved 2006 06 18 TH NK Again Protesters A Better Earth September 2004 Archived from the original on May 12 2006 Retrieved 2006 06 18 3 Ford skal saelge norsk elbil i Danmark Berlingske Tidende Erhverv Ford is going to sell Norwegian electric car in Denmark 1999 07 01 p 4 Automotive Industries Feb 1999 Gerry Kobe Findarticles com 1999 Retrieved 2010 12 23 TH NK city Electric Vehicle Demonstration Program Final Project Report PDF Idaho National Laboratory 2006 07 15 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 14 Retrieved 2016 08 15 SEC File 5 39045 Secinfo com Retrieved 2010 12 23 greenpeace org Th nk Again Ford Does a U Turn Archived 2006 06 09 at the Wayback Machine TH NK Again Ford Does a U Turn Greenpeace 2004 09 17 Archived from the original on 2006 06 09 Retrieved 2006 06 18 teslamotors com Introducing Tesla Energy Group Archived 2009 10 14 at the Wayback Machine latimes com Tesla to supply batteries for electric cars greencarcongress com greencarcongress com 2007 11 02 Retrieved 2010 12 23 www think no www think no Archived from the original on 2011 08 09 Retrieved 2010 12 23 GE Invests in Electric Vehicle Producer Think and Battery Manufacturer A123 Systems to Commercialize Electric Car Press release General Electric 2008 03 05 Archived from the original on 2008 03 18 Retrieved 2016 08 15 Think press release Think no Archived from the original on 2008 12 18 Retrieved 2010 12 23 A123 Systems press release A123systems com Archived from the original on 2009 06 09 Retrieved 2010 12 23 Think Ox TH NK Ox Technology amp Innovation Home Website Interface Archived from the original on 2008 12 07 Retrieved 2008 03 21 a b New TH NK city EV Makes UK Show Debut Worldcarfans Retrieved 2009 08 27 Green Wombat dead link CNBC Website Cnbc com Archived from the original on 2015 09 09 Retrieved 2010 12 23 Motavalli Jim 2008 12 17 NYTimes Website Wheels blogs nytimes com Retrieved 2010 12 23 Sustainable Business Sustainable Business 2009 01 13 Retrieved 2010 12 23 Blanco Sebastian 2009 08 27 Think exits bankruptcy gets 47m for production move to Finland Autoblog Green Green autoblog com Retrieved 2010 06 23 Metso s Valmet to start making Think electric car forbes com 2009 08 27 Retrieved 2009 08 27 dead link THINK City production starts at Valmet Automotive valmet automotive com automotive Retrieved 2009 12 11 Martin LaMonica 2010 01 05 Think to manufacture electric cars in Indiana Green Tech CNET News News cnet com Archived from the original on 2011 06 17 Retrieved 2010 06 23 THINK to sell City EV in New York followed by other U S cities Leftlanenews com 2010 04 02 Retrieved 2010 06 23 Think delivers first U S built electric cars Leftlanenews com TH NK Different Automotive Design and Production Archived from the original on 2006 06 19 Retrieved 2006 06 19 THINK City 4 seater The THINK City THINK Electric Car the all electric and highway safe THINK City Thinkev com Archived from the original on 2010 12 15 Retrieved 2011 03 24 Jim Montavalli 2009 12 11 Think Restarts Production in Finland New York Times Retrieved 2010 04 04 THINK Begins EV Sales in Finland Green Car Congress 2010 09 11 Retrieved 2010 09 12 Eric Loveday 2010 09 13 Think kicks off sales of City electric vehicle in Finland AutoblogGreen Retrieved 2010 09 14 TH NK Ox Photos Picture gallery Press amp Pictures Home Website Interface Think no Archived from the original on 2010 01 21 Retrieved 2009 08 27 References editRapid Charging Will Help Jump Start the Electric Vehicle Market Green Car Journal March 30 2010 Richard Canny 2010 Th nk City Driving Impressions Road and Track USA March 29 2010 Ian Adcock THINK Invests in New R amp D Center in Oslo EV World March 30 2010External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Think Global Official Think EV website at the Wayback Machine archived 2010 03 01 Think Mobility product page at the Wayback Machine archived 2001 01 24 Official Ford TH NK page Wendy Priesnitz 2000 01 12 Ford Launches Line of Electric Vehicles Natural Life Magazine Archived from the original on 2000 08 19 Retrieved 2010 09 13 A review of the Sport Version of the TH NK Neighbor at TropiCar Inc Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Think Global amp oldid 1181829663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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