뉴스 읽고 한마디

전기차 스캔들

공석환 2009. 9. 28. 12:31

지금 미국에서도 전기차의 개발이 관심거리이다. 그런데 대중용이 아닌 전기 스포츠카를 겨냥하는 회사들이 몇있다. 그 중 가장 잘 알려진 것이 테슬라 모터스(Tesla Motors)이다.
 
최근에 테슬라 모터스는 실리콘 밸리의 유명한 벤처캐피탈인 드레이퍼 피셔 주베트슨( Draper Fisher Jurvetson)과 밴티지 포인트 벤쳐스(  VantagePoint Ventures)로부터 상당한 금액의 초기 투자를 받은 다음에 최근 미국 에너지성(Dept. of Energy)로부터 4억6천5백만불(약 5500억원)의 융자에 보증을 받은 바 있다.
 
나도 위 드레이퍼 피셔 주베트슨의 파트너 중 한사람인 주베트슨을 2000년에 이종문회장이 주최한 실리콘밸리에서 치루어진 벤처 컨퍼런스에서 직접 만나 같은 테이블에서 식사하면서 이야기를 해 본적이 있다. 당시 30대 초반의 젊은 나이에도 불구하고 대단히 공격적인 투자를 하였다.
 
그런데 최근 핀란드에서 전기 스포츠카를 생산하는 피스커(Fisker)라는 회사에 대해 미국 에너지성이 5억2천8백만불(약 6200억원)에 대한 융자 지급보증을 한 것에 대해 논란이 있다. 밑에 미국 Wall Street Journal에 나온 원문기사를 첨부한다.
 
 융자에 대한 지급보증을 받은 피스커라는 회사는 미국회사로 되어 있지만 원래 핀랜드에서 전기 스포츠카를 연구 개발하고 향후 제조하려고 하는 회사이다.  밑에 사진이 나오는데 판매 예정가격이 8만9천불(약 일억천만원)으로 일반 사람들이 타기에는 부담되는 것이다.
 
지금 이 것이 정치적으로 문제가 되는 것은 피스커가 미국 정부에 융자 지급보증을 받기 전에 실리콘 밸리의 유명한 벤처캐피탈인 클라이너 퍼킨스 코필드, 바이어스(Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers)로부터 상당한 투자를 받았었다.
 
그런데 위 클라이너 퍼킨스에 전에 미국 부통령을 역임한 앨 고어가 파트너(주주 중역이라고 표현됨)로 있고 오바마 대통령 선거에 220만불(약 26억원)을 기부하였던 것이다.
 
그래서 피스커라는 회사가 원래 핀랜드 회사로 지금도 제조는 핀랜드에서 할 예정임인데도 불구하고 앨 고어와 막대한 기부금의 영향력으로 미국 정부의 지급보증을 받지 않은 가 하는 것이 문제되고 있는 것이다.
 
그러나 피스커 회사쪽에서는 이러한 고급기술이 나중에 대중용 전기차를 만드는데에도 도움이 된다고 항변을 하고 있다.
 
지금 이 것이 문제되는 것은 미국에서 많은 그린에너지 관계 업체들이 미국정부로부터 융자에 대한 지급 보증을 위해 신청하였는데 거절당한 것이다. 이러한 초기 벤처회사에 대한 지급보증은 위험이 크기 때문에 정부의 매년 한도가 있다. 그런데 일부 부유층만 타는 전기 스포츠카 그 것도 핀랜드에서 제조하는 회사에 대해 거액의 지급보증이 되니 문제가 되는 것 같다.
 
반면에 만오천불(약 천팔백만원)에서 이만오천불(약 삼천만원) 사이의 하이브리드 카를 제조하려던  XP Vehicles라는 다른 작은 초기기업의 사장 스캇 레드몬드(Scott Redmond,)는 에너지 성에 접촉하여 4천만불(약 480억원)서류심사를 청구하였을 때 '서류요건'을 충족하였다고 들었는데도 불구하고 최종적으로는 거절을 받았다고 불평을 한다.
 
에너지 성에에서는 피스커 회사에 대한 지급보증건에 대해 충분한 요건 심사를 거쳤고 위 회사가 장래에는 4만불(약 4800만원)의 차를 개발 판매할 예정이라고 합리화하고 있다.
 
참고로 나도 위 기사를 바이오에너지 관련하여 매일 정보를 주는 사이트에서 전달받았다. 바이오에너지 회사들도 미국 정부의 지급보증을 원하는 프로젝트를 진행하는 회사가 많은데 이 소식에 거의 분개하는 듯한 논평이 나왔다.
 
객관적으로 전기차 회사의 주장이 옳은지 위 지급보증이 부당한 특혜인지 아직 판단하기는 이르다. 계속 진행되는 상황을 보려 한다.
 

 

 

 

Fisker-Karma125x100.jpg

Gore-Backed Car Firm Gets Large U.S. Loan

(See Corrections & Amplifications below.)

WASHINGTON -- A tiny car company backed by former Vice President Al Gore has just gotten a $529 million U.S. government loan to help build a hybrid sports car in Finland that will sell for about $89,000.

The award this week to California startup Fisker Automotive Inc. follows a $465 million government loan to Tesla Motors Inc., purveyors of a $109,000 British-built electric Roadster. Tesla is a California startup focusing on all-electric vehicles, with a number of celebrity endorsements that is backed by investors that have contributed to Democratic campaigns.

Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Fisker's Karma hybrid sports car, above, will initially cost about $89,000.

The awards to Fisker and Tesla have prompted concern from companies that have had their bids for loans rejected, and criticism from groups that question why vehicles aimed at the wealthiest customers are getting loans subsidized by taxpayers.

"This is not for average Americans," said Leslie Paige, a spokeswoman for Citizens Against Government Waste, an anti-tax group in Washington. "This is for people to put something in their driveway that is a conversation piece. It's status symbol thing."

DOE officials spent months working with Fisker on its application, touring its Irvine, Calif., and Pontiac, Mich., facilities and test-driving prototypes.

Matt Rogers, who oversees the department's loan programs as a senior adviser to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, said Fisker was awarded the loan after a "detailed technical review" that concluded the company could eventually deliver a highly fuel-efficient hybrid car to a mass audience. Fisker said most of its DOE loan will be used to finance U.S. production of a $40,000 family sedan that has yet to be designed.

"It's the ability to drive significant change in fuel economy across a large market segment" that swayed the department to approve the Fisker loan, Mr. Rogers said. "We got quite excited."

Henrik Fisker, who designed cars for BMW, Aston Martin and Tesla before starting his Fisker Automotive in 2007, said his goal is to build the first plug-in electric hybrids that won't sacrifice the luxury, performance and looks of traditional gas-powered luxury cars.

The Karma will target an exclusive audience -- Gore was one of the first to sign up for one. Mr. Fisker says all new technology starts out being expensive. He pointed to flat-screen televisions that once started at $25,000 but are now affordable to the mass market.

The four-door Karma, powered by a lithium-ion battery, will be able to run solely on electric power for 50 miles, and will achieve an average fuel economy of 100 mpg over the span of a year, the company says. Production is scheduled to start in December, with about 15,000 vehicles a year expected to hit the U.S. market starting next June.

Many of the 1,500 people who have made deposits on the Karma are former BMW and Mercedes owners who want an environmentally friendly car without sacrificing luxury, Mr. Fisker said.

He said he pitched the Karma to Mr. Gore at an event hosted by KPCB last year, and that the former vice president almost immediately submitted a down payment for the car.

Kalee Kreider, a spokeswoman for Mr. Gore, confirmed that the former vice president backs Fisker and purchased a Karma. "He believes that a global shift of the automobile fleet toward electric vehicles, accompanying a shift toward renewable-energy generation, represents an important part of a sensible strategy for solving the climate crisis," she said in a statement.

Fisker's top investors include Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, a veteran Silicon Valley venture-capital firm of which Gore is a partner. Employees of KPCB have donated more than $2.2 million to political campaigns, mostly for Democrats, including President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan group that tracks campaign contributions.

Officials at Kleiner Perkins didn't return requests for comment.

Asked whether Mr. Gore had any influence on Fisker's application, the DOE's Rogers said, "None at all."

"This is a very attractive, very across-party-lines kind of vehicle," Mr. Rogers said. "All of the detailed due diligence [was] done by independent review teams."

Other Fisker investors include Eco-Drive (Capital) Partners LLC, an investment consortium, and Qatar Investment Authority, a state-run investor based in Qatar.

Fisker's government loans will come from a $25 billion program established by Congress in 2007 to help auto makers invest in the technology to meet a new congressional mandate to improve fuel efficiency. In June, the DOE awarded the first $8 billion from the program to Ford Motor Co., Nissan Motor Co., and Tesla, which are all developing electric cars.

Some companies that have been turned down for loans from DOE say they did not get much feedback from the department about their applications. O. John Coletti, president of EcoMotors International of Troy, Mich., said his company applied for a $20 million loan from the agency last December, and last month got a one-page rejection letter from the loan program's director, Lachlan Seward. EcoMotors' lead investor is Vinod Khosla, himself a former Kleiner Perkins partner and a longtime campaign contributor to Republicans and Democrats alike.

"I don't have an issue with the winners … it's possible somebody has better ideas than us," Mr. Coletti said. At the same time, he said, "More feedback from DOE on a timely basis would be wonderful. When you're running a business you'd like to know whether you're going to be able to take advantage of this opportunity."

Mr. Coletti's company -- which makes diesel engines and is still waiting to hear from the Department on a separate loan application to help it build a manufacturing facility -- isn't without politically well-connected patrons, either. Its major investor is Vinod Khosla, himself a former Kleiner Perkins partner who has donated to campaigns.

Scott Redmond, CEO of XP Vehicles Inc., said he met with DOE officials twice in Washington after applying for a $40 million loan to develop a $15,000 to $25,000 hybrid, and that both times he was told his application looked good. Since receiving a rejection letter from DOE in August, Redmond said, he has been unable to get a full explanation as to why his request was turned down.

Mr. Rogers said he was not at liberty to discuss individual applications that had been turned down, but said the process has been handled fairly and objectively.

Write to Josh Mitchell at joshua.mitchell@dowjones.com and Stephen Power at stephen.power@wsj.com