Electro-glide: Tokushi Nakashima, president of Uzushio Electric Co.'s subsidiary in the Philippines, rides the company's electric tricycle in Manila. | KYODO
- 1 charge: 50 Km max
 - Cost: ₱_____
 - No. of passenger: 7-9 pass
 - Weight: 500 Kg
 - Speed: 60kph
 - Imported oil savings: $100 Million USD per year
 
Japanese electric vehicles maker and  distributor Uzushio Electric Co. is making a bid to distribute electric  tricycles in the Philippines as the country implements a plan to replace  100,000 gasoline-burning, air-polluting tricycles by 2016.
Tokushi Nakashima, head of BEET Philippine  Inc., a local subsidiary of Uzushio Electric Co., told a press conference  Monday that his company has submitted a bid to the Asian Development Bank,  which is providing $300 million toward the e-tricycle project being carried out  in cooperation with the Philippine government.
The company, which opened in March, also  registered its e-trike model with the Philippines' Land Transportation Office,  affirming its roadworthiness and making it accessible for interested private  consumers.
Nakashima said Uzushio Electric, having  developed more than 50 models of electric vehicles in Japan, is ready to help  the Philippines solve its environmental woes through participation in the  project, while at the same time improve the lives of tricycle drivers who are  expected to take home a bigger daily income because electricity costs less than  gasoline.
Also called tuk tuks, tricycles, which carry  between four to nine passengers, are commonly seen in residential areas of  Metro Manila, as well as on highways in the countryside. They are notoriously  loud and emit a lot of exhaust.
The Philippine government hopes the e-tricycle  project will cut down on noise, save more than $100 million a year in fuel  imports, create jobs through local production of e-tricycles and decrease  annual carbon dioxide emissions by about 260,000 tons.
An ADB study shows gasoline-fueled tricycles  are responsible for more than two-thirds of all air pollution generated by the  country's entire transport sector, and without intervention, the carbon  emissions are set to almost quadruple in less than 25 years.
Nakashima said BEET's e-tricycle is made of  five key components, which satisfy the requirements for the Philippines'  various road and weather conditions: a rechargeable lithium-ion battery, an AC  motor, an inverter, a vehicle control unit, and a battery management system.
It weighs around 500 kg, accommodates up to  seven people including the driver, runs at speeds of up to 60 kph and can cover  50 km on a single charge.
Nakashima said BEET Philippine has tied up with  Softbank Mobile Corp. to develop a billing system for lease or loan payment, as  well as the integration of an advanced telecommunication system to track the  trikes.
BEET Philippine is in talks with potential  assemblers in the Philippines in preparation for mass production, he added.
Nakashima declined to disclose how much the  company's e-tricycle units would sell for since the ADB is still assessing its  bid, along with those of another Japanese firm, a South Korean one and a  Taiwanese one.
Japan  Times



