Electric transportation pioneer ZAP announced September 19 that increasing demand has resulted in record August 2008 sales (unaudited) for its Advanced Technology Vehicle division, the most since ZAP's Xebra sedan and truck were launched in 2006.
Unaudited sales for ZAP electric vehicles surged to $737,000 in August, vs. $392,000 a year ago, an increase of $345,000 or 88 percent. ZAP CEO Steve Schneider said the reason for the increase was a combination of high gas prices and the fact that ZAP has one of the few affordable, street-legal, city-speed electric vehicles in production line assembly today.
In contrast, conventional auto industry sales for the U.S. fell 15.5 percent compared with August of last year but rose 10 percent from July, the worst month in 16 years, Autodata Corporation reported to the Associated Press. Ford reported August sales were down 26.5 percent over August 2007. General Motors said its August sales were down 20 percent. Chrysler LLC said its U.S. sales fell more than 34 percent last month.
The ZAP Xebra is rapidly expanding the niche for electric vehicle driving. Rather than designing their popular city-car simply to replace a gasoline vehicle, ZAP's approach to the Xebra was to make an affordable, 100 percent electric vehicle for on-road use today. MSRP is $11,700 for the sedan and $12,500 on the truck. ZAP designed the Xebra primarily for in-town personal, family, businesses and fleet operation. Xebras can travel up to 40 mph.
About ZAP
ZAP has been a leader in electric transportation since 1994, delivering over 100,000 vehicles to consumers in more than 75 countries. Currently, ZAP manufactures a line of electric vehicles, including electric city-cars and trucks, motorcycles, scooters, bicycles, and ATVs. ZAP sells one of the only electric city-cars and trucks in production today and is developing a high-performance electric vehicle called the ZAP Alias. The company recently announced a strategic partnership with Dubai-based Al Yousuf Group to expand its international vehicle distribution.
