news-record.com

NEWS

New N.C. McDonald's will feed hungry electric cars

Thursday, July 9, 2009
(Updated 8:56 pm)

— A Big Mac with a jolt of juice is on the menu at a new Raleigh-area McDonald's that will be the first in the nation to feature electric car charging stations.

The new McDonald's opens Tuesday with two battery charging units for patrons of the restaurant or the nearby shopping center to use free of charge.

McDonald's said it will add charging stations to parking lots at some of its restaurants across the country if the Cary venture proves successful.

"This new Cary location will help us evaluate the tactics of green building," said McDonald's spokeswoman Danya Proud. The McDonald's stations will be among the first public car chargers in the state.

NovaCharge, the Florida-based distributor of the ChargePoint stations, said the McDonald's chargers are a new option for electric car owners who now mostly charge at home.

"The typical electric car is going to go about 40 miles on a charge," said Helda Rodriguez, president of NovaCharge. Public charging stations help eliminate "range anxiety" for electric car owners who are afraid of running out of juice while on errands or sitting in traffic.

The units are manufactured by Coulomb Technologies and cost about $5,000 a piece. NovaCharge says it has distributed hundreds of units in the U.S.

Advocates argue electricity is cleaner, cheaper and a more secure source of energy for cars than oil since it can be produced domestically. But the numbers haven't caught up with the buzz.

"Right now there are under 1,000 all-electric cars in the U.S.," said Felix Kramer, the founder of CalCars.org, a California-based nonprofit.

So who's going to top-off their battery at the Cary McDonald's?

Peter Eckhoff, president of the Triangle Electric Auto Association, estimates there are only "several dozen" electric cars in the Triangle region.

He said McDonald's plan is "farsighted" but on the cutting edge: "As demand grows, the chargers will be there."

Comments

This article has been closed to new comments. Comments are generally closed after 14 days. However, comments may be closed earlier at the discretion of the News & Record.

Inappropriate content? Please report abuse.

jls

July 10, 2009 - 12:46 am EDT

What about feeding hungry and homeless people?

If you were a gas station I could understand,

What is your actual cost on a burger vs. charging an electric car?

You make me McSick

dcpyatt

July 10, 2009 - 3:23 am EDT

In response to JLS's comment, my electric car costs about 40 cents to charge for 6-8 hours, so giving an intermediate charge to customers who may sit and eat for 20-30 minutes might cost all of 2-1/2 cents... hardly a major cost to McDonald's to do something ecologically friendly.

Also the article does not say that this would be a free charge, that was just assumed. I would gladly put a quarter in for an intermediate charge. They could donate a portion of that quarter to the Ronald McDonald Children's Charities, and still pay for the cost of providing the charge. I'd rather do that than pay 75 cents for 2 minutes of air to try to fill a flat tire at a gas station.

I welcome the day that businesses realize that the goodwill donation of a charging station will be appreciated and remembered by those who use them. An intermediate charging stop can increase the range of an electric car, helping break the commute-only functionality that they typically get categorized into.

As for Felix Kramer's comment about there being "under 1000 all-electric cars in the U.S.", I feel this is greatly underestimated, as there are well over 2000 documented electric cars at www.evalbum.com, and this is surely a small representative sampling of what are actually on the roads. Mr. Kramer's organization is involved with plug-in hybrid vehicles, perhaps his estimate is referring to that segment of the electric car world, not including true plug-in only electric vehicles, both commercially produced as well as consumer-converted vehicles.

David C. Pyatt

Alliance Ohio
1974 commercially produced plug-in electric Sebring-Vanguard CitiCar
1980 commercially produced plug-in electric Commuter Vehicles, Inc. Comuta-Car

dcpyatt

July 10, 2009 - 3:28 am EDT

I stand corrected, the article DID state that this is a free charging station, however I stand by my statement that I would gladly pay a token payment for this type of service, and McDonald's could recover their costs as well as enrich their charitable donations.

David C. Pyatt

eMail Updates

Advertisement | Advertise with Us

Featured Ads

Search

Advertisement | Advertise with Us
Advertisement | Advertise with Us
Advertisement | Advertise with Us

News & Record Network Sites

User Tools

  • Mobile
  • Social
  • RSS
  • Share
  • Sign in to MyNR

Search