Driving.ca writer Lorraine Sommerfeld, right, with Julie Lychak of Subaru Canada Driving.ca writers took home several trophies at the annual Automobile Journalists Association of Canada (AJAC) awards banquet this past week, presented by CarGurus.Jil McIntosh won the Environmental Journalism Award presented by Nissan Canada. She was last year’s Jaguar Land Rover Canada Journalist of the Year.Lorraine Sommerfeld won the inaugural KAL Tire Business Writing Journalism Award for her piece on escalating car loans. Journalist of the Year in 2014, she was this year’s runner-up in that category, and was also the runner-up in the Subaru Feature Writing division. Industry innovation awards went to Hyundai for its blind-spot-view monitor; Porsche for the 800-volt architecture underpinning the Taycan; and to FCA for its Ram blind-spot monitoring with trailer detection.Quebec journalist Marc Lachapelle won 2019’s Journalist of the Year, marking the fourth time he’s taken home that trophy.To celebrate the launch of the new Defender, Jaguar Land Rover also sponsored a new adventure writing award, won by Lesley Wimbush.The evening capped off a vastly overhauled AJAC “TestFest,” an event that see new vehicles from all segments being put through their paces at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park in Bowmanville, Ontario. Winners of that contest will be announced at the 2020 Canadian International Auto Show in
Origin: Driving.ca takes home several AJAC journalism awards
Awards
Govt awards almost 40m to EV charging projects
Govt awards almost £40m to EV charging projects There is a focus on urban and residential EV charging Electric vehicle charging is set to benefit from £37 million in funding from the UK Government as part of its Road to Zero strategy. The announcement has been made on the first anniversary of the strategy’s lunch, which looks to remove new petrol and diesel cars from sale in the UK by 2040. The money will be split between 12 projects, which will support innovation in and expansion of the market. The key focuses will include solar-powered EV charging forecourts, underground charging set-ups, and wireless EV systems. Wireless EV charging will receive more than £2 million in funding, with charge point company and network Char.gy set to deploy wireless charging technology on residential streets. This will improve convenience for drivers, but also make the street environment safer, with no cables required at all. Instead, drivers with a wireless charging-enabled EV will be able to park up and charge with no need to plug in. There are very few models on the market that currently offer wireless charging capability, though more are on their way, and it is the sort of system that could be retrofitted to many EVs. Trials will be carried out in Milton Keynes, the London Borough of Redbridge, and Buckinghamshire. Pop-up charge points are set to receive investment too, with units set to be rolled out in Dundee and Plymouth, clearing up street furniture when it’s not needed on residential streets. Funding will also be used to support a renovation project, which will install charge points in car parks to allow for large-scale charging at night. An energy storage and advanced electronics project will be capable of providing ‘semi-rapid’ fast charging using a low power grid connection, minmising the need for expensive substation upgrades. There will also be a project that uses existing Virgin Media infrastructure – physical and online – to deliver widespread, cost-effective EV charging, using high-speed internet connections to share information about charging progress and parking spaces.
Origin: Govt awards almost 40m to EV charging projects
Autocar Awards 2019: Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche wins Issigonis Award for extraordinary achievements in motoring
It’s likely no boss at Daimler will wear a tie to a middle-ranking business meeting again. In 2015 the company’s long-serving, high-achieving CEO Dr Dieter Zetsche – winner of this year’s Issigonis Trophy, Autocar’s highest accolade – gave up neckware for meetings. His acolytes gratefully followed suit. Even after four years people still remark on this apocalyptic change at least as much as they do about the Mercedes CEO’s far more significant corporate achievements – such as demerging the company from a disastrous Chrysler alliance, changing company culture, surviving the worst of Dieselgate despite a huge recall of Mercedes models, beating BMW in 2016, vigorously embracing the new electrification age and leaving the company in a well-founded and profitable condition, stuffed with ideas to face the future. utocar Awards 2019: The
Origin: Autocar Awards 2019: Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche wins Issigonis Award for extraordinary achievements in motoring