An Infiniti dealership sells a Tesla to Sherbrooke’s mayor – and everybody goes crazy

Now that is customer service: Steve Lussier, mayor of Sherbrooke in Quebec Eastern Townships, was ready for a new car, and as a hybrid vehicle owner for the past 15 years, wanted something electric.But his long-trusted Infiniti-Nissan dealership the one he bought his Infiniti Q50 Hybrid and (rare) Nissan Pathfinder Hybrid (still owns it) from didnt have a new 100-per-cent electric model to offer him.Odds are it wont for another two or three years.So the dealership pulled some strings and got him what he wanted, a used 2018 Tesla Model 3 with just 30,000 kilometers on the clock, traded in by a local businessman.In one day, the transaction was done, says Lussier, who took delivery of the well-equipped full-electric sedan last Friday. I still have discover some of its features its such an advanced-techno car but for now, I very happy about it.Our story would normally end here, but Infiniti Sherbrooke posted about the deal on its social media and inadvertently inspired numerous blog posts blowing the whole thing up headlines along the lines of mayor turning green or Infiniti dealership admits it doesn’t have electric models.The dealerships Facebook page was flooded with comments about how the brand, in an effort to retain a loyal customer, instead lost him to Elon Musk, or how Infinitis doing Teslas marketing for it.Jean-Sbastien Poulin, co-owner of Infiniti de Sherbrooke, cant believe all this fuss when, bottom line, his client wanted an electric car. Infinitis brand doesnt have yet an electric car. So I found a solution.There are plenty of dealerships that sell other brands vehicles to accommodate their customers why all these roadblocks suddenly thrown at us?And of course, Infiniti isnt the only luxury brand without a pure electric offering. Try shopping for EVs at Acura, Mercedes-Benz, Lincoln, Cadillac, Land Rover or even Lexus, the haut-de-gamme arm of hybrid hype-builder Toyota. Yes, Lussier could have bought an Infiniti-adjacent Nissan Leaf, a good vehicle (he) recently test-drove for a whole week, but he says its not where I wanted to go. Ditto the thought of heading to Sherbrooke BMW for a new i3.He wasnt content waiting a year on an admittedly attractive new Polestar, and could have been lured into a Jaguar I-Pace if the brand had had staff on hand to answer his questions when he visited the Salon du véhicule électrique in Saint-Hyacinthe last October. Oops.But then, Lussier was already hooked on a Tesla anyway. I put a $1,000 a year ago to reserve a brand-new one, he told Driving.ca. After a test drive last summer, he fell in love with the Californian electric sedan. One of my municipal councillors already owns one, and he loves it, too.Lussier didnt suddenly turn green either. (Next week at city hall,) we are going to announce additional funding to help our citizens finance their home EV-charging stations, the Mayor confided to this author.We have been doing so with a $500 municipal subsidy since 2013, but it became so popular, with more than 300 requests a year, we had to review the budget allowance. So well reveal something else next Monday.Even greener, Lussier says hes set to purchase his first electric motocross bike from the local Valcourt Bombardier (BRP), which last February bought up the now-defunct California-based Alta all-electric motorcycle company.Asked if he will eventually buy an electric Infiniti when they hit the Sherbrooke showroom, Lussier says Im eager to test-drive what my dealership will offer, but if ever I want to buy another Tesla, I know that once again, it will accommodate
Origin: An Infiniti dealership sells a Tesla to Sherbrooke’s mayor – and everybody goes crazy

Toyota partnering with basically everybody to popularize EVs

Toyota early June laid out plans to collaborate with a host of other Japanese automakers as part of a new push to popularize battery-electric vehicles, and to soon reveal new technologies it’s developed for next-gen EVs, like solid-state batteries. The announcement was made a day after it was revealed Toyota and Subaru would jointly develop a platform to underpin fully electric midsize and large passenger cars. They also announced a collaboration to jointly develop a C-segment-class BEV crossover for sale under each company’s own brand. Suzuki and Daihatsu would also see their badges on compact cars derived from the collaboration, and it’s rumoured that Mazda will be involved in the effort, too. Toyota wants to shift focus from the conventional idea of “manufacturing BEVs and having customers buy them” to the idea of searching for partners openly and extensively, striving to engage in initiatives to construct new business models, Shigeki Terashi, executive vice-president at Toyota, said at a presentation June 7 of the challenges facing his company. Parsing all that marketing speak, we find a few nuggets of product information. The lozenge-shaped vehicles shown above are referred to as ultra-compact BEVs and are planned for the Japanese market, targeted at people who prefer smaller vehicles or municipalities who seek to make economical choices. That commercially planned vehicle shown on the left has a planned release date of 2020, with a maximum speed of 60 km/h and a 100 km range on a single charge. It measures just 2500 mm in length, about same as the wheelbase of a 2019 Mini Cooper. Closer to home, an electrified version of Toyota’s new global platform, dubbed e-TNGA, will underpin half a dozen variations of BEVs. It is from this platform the Toyota/Subaru vehicle will spring, slated to debut on this soil in the early 2020s. Given that it is said to have America as its main target market, look for plenty of cargo space and all-wheel drive. And lots of cupholders. Finally, Toyota said its solid-state battery technology is expected to debut in 2020, in sync with the Olympics in Tokyo. The new battery type should significantly reduce the length of charging times and expand driving range. If you’re interested in reading the whole presentation, you can find it
Origin: Toyota partnering with basically everybody to popularize EVs