Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Leaked Fisker Atlantic documents reveal production delay, specs
The Atlantic, formerly known as Project Nina, will compete pricewise against the BMW 3 and 5 Series sedans as well as the Mercedes-Benz C-Class and E-Class, Jaguar XF and Audi A4 and A6. That would put the model in the $50,000 to $60,000 range, according to the publication. The model, which will still be produced at Fisker's Delaware plant, will have 300 horsepower, a 0-60 time of 6.5 seconds and emissions of 50 grams per kilometer of CO2, Inside EVs said, citing the documents.
"As these documents are obviously leaked investor documents and highly confidential, I am not prepared to comment any further," a Fisker representative told AutoblogGreen.
The status of the Atlantic has been in question since plans for the former General Motors plant in Delaware were put on hold once the U.S. Department of Energy froze most of the $529 million in loans earmarked for the California-based company.
Fisker unveiled the Atlantic at the New York Auto Show last month, saying that the car's price tag would be "a much lower price point" than Fisker's Karma sedan.
Source: Autoblog Green
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Did a Fisker Karma Cause a House Fire?
Last week, a 2012 Fisker Karma owner in Fort Bend County parked his Karma in an attached garage, alongside a Mercedes SUV and an Acura NSX. Three minutes later, the Karma was engulfed in flames.
While details are still sparse, this much is known: the owner claims to have smelled burning rubber upon exiting the vehicle, and the car was not plugged in at the time of the incident.
According to Fort Bend County’s chief fire investigator, Robert Baker, the Karma was the origin of the fire, but the cause of the blaze is still under investigation.
Autoweek reports that the car was purchased in April, after the battery and software recall campaigns, and was a total loss in the fire. Damage to the garage and second floor of the house was extensive, but it isn’t clear if the other vehicles in the garage will also need to be written off.
Fisker was quick to deploy engineers to the scene, prompting Baker to remark, “I’ve worked homicides with less secrecy. There have to be about 15 engineers down here working on this one.”
Baker drew parallels to golf cart fires, of which he investigates some 50 incidents per year. That may be a stretch, given that the cause of the fire is still under investigation and that the Karma isn’t powered by lead-acid batteries.
Fisker released a statement on the incident, citing conflicting reports and uncertainty surrounding the fire. In the automaker’s own words:
Last week, Fisker Automotive was made aware of a garage fire involving three vehicles, including a Karma sedan, that were parked at a newly-constructed residence in Sugar Land, Texas. There were no injuries.
There are conflicting reports and uncertainty surrounding this particular incident. The cause of the fire is not yet known and is being investigated.
We have not yet seen any written report form the Fort Bend fire department and believe that their investigation is continuing. As of now, multiple insurance investigators are involved, and we have not ruled out possible fraud or malicious intent. We are aware that fireworks were found in the garage in or around the vehicles. Also, an electrical panel located in the garage next to the vehicles is also being examined by the investigators as well as fire department officials. Based on initial observations and inspections, the Karma's lithium ion battery pack was not being charged at the time and is still intact and does not appear to have been a contributing factor in this incident.
Fisker will continue to participate fully in the investigation but will not be commenting further until all the facts are established.
Source: Green Car Reports
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Justin Bieber chromes his Fisker Karma - Video

While we normally don't care whether or not Justin Beiber wakes up and takes a breath each morning, it is unfortunate news when the teen pop idol is gifted a six-figure plug-in hybrid produced by one of the world's best designers, and then proceeds to wrap it in chrome, stick on some fuscia LEDs and drive it around on giant black wheels.
Celebrity-stalking site TMZ caught the Beiber taking his one true love, the also-famous-for-reasons-beyond-our-comprehension Selena Gomez, to Chick-fil-A in the reflective Karma. The editors at TMZ seem to agree with us that Bieber's treatment of his Karma is criminal, but were surprised to discover that chroming one's car is well within the rule of law.
That doesn't mean the Bieb's daily driver is entirely copacetic, as the tiny strip of fuscia LEDs installed under the front grille violate California law. It also violates the laws of good taste, but that's just our opinion.
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Fisker unveils the Atlantic design prototype in New York; second-generation EVer powertrain
Like the Karma sedan, the Fisker Atlantic is a plug-in series hybrid vehicle that allows drivers to switch manually or automatically between electric and gasoline driving modes and sustain the charge of its lithium-ion batteries on the move.
Its four-cylinder gasoline engine, which acts as a generator and is not mechanically connected to the wheels, is tuned to offer maximum economy and high torque. Fisker says the Atlantic EVer powertrain will offer “highly competitive” performance for a car in its class. The standard powertrain will be configured for rear-wheel drive and an all-wheel drive version will be offered as an option.
The Atlantic design prototype’s glass roof shows off a ridged ‘spider’ structure. This construction also allows the Atlantic to offer a remarkable amount of rear headroom for a car with its stance. This approach fulfills and surpasses all current and projected future rollover safety and crash-test requirements worldwide, according to the company. The Fisker Atlantic’s long wheelbase also affords extra legroom for rear passengers and more space in the trunk.
The rear door handles have been integrated in the rear C-pillars, to continue the sense and look of a sporting coupe without losing the practicality of a four-door sedan. The rear end of the car is aerodynamically shaped, with a sharp spoiler lip on the trunk that runs down over the side of the car to enhance aerodynamic performance.
Overall, the Fisker Atlantic’s dimensions are comparable to those of an Audi A5, according to the company.
Fisker Automotive is transitioning from a start-up automaker to a fully-fledged mainstream car manufacturer and the Atlantic is a crucial milestone in that process. We have a long way to go, but in the near future Fisker intends to deliver this exceptional American-designed, engineered, and manufactured vehicle to showrooms worldwide.
More details on the Fisker Atlantic, including statistics, prices and an on-sale date will be given closer to the launch of the production car.
Monday, April 2, 2012
Project Nina revealed as Fisker Atlantic, images leak early

Here it is, folks. This is the car that was under cover in the spy shots we showed you a few days ago, and it's going to be called the Fisker Atlantic when it debuts this week at the New York Auto Show. These two images of the car appeared today on a Czech website, and the rear shot clearly shows a license plate bearing the name "Atlantic."
Previously called Project Nina, the Atlantic will slot in Fisker's fledgeling lineup below the Karma, and reportedly cost considerably less. While any talk of pricing is just a guess at this point, rumor has it the Atlantic will be about half the price of the Karma, putting it squarely in the $45,000-$55,000 range. It's a plug-in series hybrid, just like its big brother, but the Atlantic will reportedly use a turbocharged four-cylinder from BMW as its range-extending generator.
We'll have more detailed information about the Atlantic when it officially debuts at the New York Auto Show this week, so come back for our live show coverage on Wednesday and Thursday, April 4-5.
Source: Autoblog Green
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Fisker Nina caught peeking out before New York reveal

Who wants to wait until the official unveiling of the Fisker Nina plug-in hybrid next week when we can see spy shots right this second? Neither do we.
So, what do the shots reveal? For starters, we can see that the Nina is indeed shorter than its Karma big brother. This is expected, but the impression we have is that the Karma's design language translates quite well into a vehicle about the size of a BMW 5 Series. The front end, too, sports a moustache-like grille that's similar to the one on the Karma. On the back side, the "EVer" badge is still proudly in place, but the non-functional diamond-shaped exhaust outlets are missing. The four-door sedan's rear doors have the handles hidden smoothly between the window and the C-pillar. Then there are the wheels. It's hard to miss those. If you want to compare the Nina with the Karma directly, open the gallery above as well as this gallery in another tab and click away.
The problem with these images is that they still don't tell us much about the car itself. We've heard the cost for the Nina, which is supposed to be powered by a BMW four-cylinder engine, will be about the same as a top-of-the-line BMW 3 Series. That implies something north of $45,000, despite what Vice President Joe Biden said back in October of 2009: "It looks like a four-door Ferrari, I can't believe it's only going to be $40,000." We'll hopefully know more when we get to the New York Auto Show next week.
After all the problems Fisker has had with the Karma launch and the DOE loan, it's important to remember that it's the vehicle you see above that the DOE has been helping with all along. Do you like where your tax dollars have gone?
Source: Autoblog Green
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Fisker Reveals Teaser of Nina Plug In Hybrid, To be Revealed in New York
So we went looking in the archives. We've heard the Nina plug-in hybrid will be about the size of a BMW 5 series and be powered by a BMW four-cylinder engine. We've also heard production is supposed to start by the middle of 2013 and that three variants will be available by the end of 2014. Those are reports from the past and we know how things change in the green car world. We'll have to see what Fisker tells us in New York when it offers up "a business update and a glimpse of our future" to know for sure. What are your thoughts?
Source: Autoblog Green
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Did Fisker Push The Karma Hybrid To Market Before It Was Ready?
The Department of Energy green loans program has come under a lot of fire, ever since solar panel-maker Solyndra filed for bankruptcy last year. Deficit hawks have targeted numerous green energy companies like Ener1 and Th!nk who were recipients of these low-interest government loans. The latest company to come under scrutiny is Fisker, whose $100,000 plug-in hybrid Karma sedan has had its share of technical issues and loan troubles.
A former employee-turned-whistle bloweralleges that the Fisker Karma was pushed to market before it was ready in order to meet the DOE loan deadline. Do these allegations ring true, or are technical issues to be expected from such new, advanced technology?
For me personally, the allegations of an unnamed, former employee of any company always come with a grain of salt. For every serious, scandalous accusation that holds weight, there seems to be an equal number of disgruntled employees looking to make a stink or a buck. To me, the truth always lies somewhere in the middle.
That said, the bumps in the Karma’s road seem to have gotten bigger and bigger. At first it was a software upgrade; then a battery fix. Last week, Consumer Reports test drove a Fisker Karma before it konked out on the highway, leaving the testers stranded. That’s the first time in the history of the company that a car just died on them. There is even a lawsuit that alleges Fisker engaged in shady business practices.
The former employee, who now works for Coda, claims that the Karma was rushed to market despite known problems. This was to meet the conditions for the DOE loans. Unfortunately, the DOE has thus far prohibited Fisker from drawing down on the $300+ million left on its $519 government loan.
The real problem, as I see it, is that the Karma is a $100,000 luxury car. DOE loan or not, Fisker should have taken the time to ensure they were selling a fully functional vehicle. I could see making excuses for some cheap, mass-produced EV. But the Fisker not only has government backing, but substantial private equity as well. A few bugs are to be expected, but the Karma’s problems only seem to be getting bigger.
I really think Obama needs to pull the plug on this project. Fisker is not keeping up their end of the deal by delivering an unfinished car that gets 20 mpg and has a price tag of $100,000.
Source: Gas2.0
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Fisker – Not Fast Enough to Outrun Angry Investors
The hits just keep on coming for electric vehicle (EV) maker Fisker Automotive Inc. (Fisker). An investor is suing the company for alleged fraud and breach of duty in the sale of company stock.
Fisker makes great looking EVs but they just cannot keep their books in order and now they are being sued by an investor by the name of Daniel Wray. Between October 2009 and April 2011 Wray bought about $210,000 in unregistered preferred Fisker stock. A nice investment in a company that looked to have potential, that is until things began to go south for Fisker.
Wray alleges he received word from Fisker on January 18th in the form of a letter informing him that due to the need for equity capital financing there was now a pay to play action in effect — Fisker wanted Wray to invest $83,922.32 on top of his previous investments. If Wray failed to do so by January 27th Wray would allegedly lose rights that he received when he first purchased Fisker stock. Rights such as a discounted price if the company went public, protection against dilution of his shares by later purchasers, and preference in a bankruptcy.
The lawsuit brought by Wray is basically saying that Fisker’s preferred stock is a scam.
To further complicate matters, the U.S. Department of Energy has frozen $336 million of Fiskers $529 million loan from last May because Fisker failed to meet a number of undisclosed milestones. Plus in the past few months Fisker has closed their Delaware plant and laid off 71 workers in Delaware and Orange County.
At a time when Fisker could really use some money from outside investors this lawsuit, and the allegations brought by the lawsuit, mean more financial hardship for a once promising company. This is not the first time Fisker has been sued due to questionable business practices. In 2008 Tesla Motors filed a lawsuit accusing Henrik Fisker of signing a design contract in order to only get an inside look at Tesla’s confidential design information and secrets, and then launch Fisker Automotive and announce a competing EV less than a year later. The judge in the case eventually ruled in favor of Fisker, denying Tesla’s claim that its competitor had pirated Tesla’s hybrid technology.
The Fisker Karma sells for $103,000.
Source: Gas2.0
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Fisker appoints Tom LaSorda CEO
Fisker Automotive, the developer of luxury range-extended electric vehicles, has appointed Tom LaSorda as its new CEO, with full responsibility for the running of the company’s day to day operations, effective immediately. LaSorda had joined the company as Vice Chairman of the Board and executive advisor to the management team in December. Co-Founder Henrik Fisker will become Executive Chairman of the company.
Henrik Fisker, who co-founded Fisker Automotive in 2007 after a design career at brands including BMW and Aston Martin, will focus on building the Fisker brand in global markets and the styling and design of future Fisker models.
A well-known industry executive, with more than 30-years experience, LaSorda was a former CEO, President and Vice Chairman of the Chrysler Group and also held a number of executive positions at General Motors over a 23-year career.
As part of our future strategy, we will be seeking strong partnerships and alliances as Fisker continues to grow as a brand.
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Fisker Karma Lays Off Workers and Looks For New Loans
The bad news just keeps on coming from electric-car startup Fisker Automotive.
The company said today that it has laid off employees and contractors at both its new Anaheim, California, headquarters and its assembly facility in Wilmington, Delaware.
Layoffs by car companies are hardly new, but Fisker was granted $529 million in low-interest loans by the U.S. Department of Energy under its advanced-technology vehicle manufacturing program.
Now Fisker is reportedly trying to renegotiate the terms of that loan, having missed critical deadlines in the development of its second vehicle, a mid-size plug-in sedan known as Project Nina.
The company has claimed that much of the work on the Nina vehicle--design, engineering, and development and testing--is already done.
In October, Fisker said full production of Project Nina won't begin until mid-2013, though the company insisted at the time that some production will occur place before the end of 2012.
According to the Associated Press, Roger Ormisher, a Fisker spokesman, said the company hopes it can "reach a resolution soon" with the Department of Energy on revised terms.

2012 Fisker Karma EcoChic, New York City, Jan 2012
Under the same DoE loan program, startup Tesla Motors [NSDQ:TSLA] also received loan guarantees of $465 million, though the big money went to established carmakers Ford ($5.9 billion) and Nissan ($1.4 billion).
Thus far, Fisker has drawn down approximately $193 million of the loans. Under the terms of the loan agreement, a maximum of $169 million was allocated to complete the development of the 2012 Fisker Karma, a range-extended electric luxury sport sedan that started deliveries very late last year.
The Karma has had significant teething troubles, with several delays in the announced launch dates and two recalls, one to prevent a battery-pack leak and the other to update software.
It was also rated at a mere 20 mpg by the EPA in range-extending mode, when the 2.0-liter gasoline engine switches on to power a generator that sends electricity to the pair of electric motors that turn the rear wheels.
A further indignity: The low, sleek Karma sedan was rated a subcompact by the EPA, based on its limited interior volume. As we learned during our brief test drive in New York last month, the car is somewhat tight inside--although not necessarily cramped.

2012 Fisker Karma EcoChic, New York City, Jan 2012
The layoffs announced today included 40 employees and contractors in Anaheim, and 26 workers at the Wilmington plant.
According to trade journal Automotive News (subscription required), the company had 650 employees in Anaheim last month, along with about 100 in Delaware.
The goal is for Fisker Automotive to conserve its cash while it attempts to renegotiate the DoE loans and seeks additional sources of equity.
Late last month, the company doubled the size of its Series D funding round to $300 million, of which it has $243 million already committed.
That brings total private investment in Fisker to $866 million, along with the $529 million of DoE loans.
Critics have suggested that startup electric carmakers Fisker and Tesla are vulnerable to the same charges of improper influence being levied after the collapse of solar-cell manufacturer Solyndra, which also received DoE loans.
Source: Green Car Reports
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Fisker and Coda News Roundup
As Fisker has begun rolling out its first Karmas, it has brushed off critics and is hiring key executives while again raising its prices, but will it now be Coda’s turn to be scrutinized?
According to an opinion piece by the LA Times, Coda Holdings is a “Trojan horse” for communist China to infiltrate America’s soft underbelly, but advises the writers, “before considering a Coda as a means of going green, remember all the red blood shed by Coda’s real backers.”
Scary stuff. Will anything come of it? We’ll have more below.
Fisker
First though, our favorite maker of six-figure EVers – OK, the only maker thus far – Fisker, snapped up two former Detroit auto industry executives to help with its plans while also deciding to levy a 6-percent price increase effective Dec. 15.
The base-level EcoStandard will now cost $102,000 and the top-drawer EcoChic model will command $116,000.
Fisker reportedly will not penalize those who already paid a $5,000 deposit and these customers have until January 15 to acquire their new Karmas at an already agreed upon price.
The latest increase follows one in January 2011 in which the EcoStandard increased to $95,900, the EcoSport was increased to $103,900 and the EcoChic rose to $108,900.
Reportedly Fisker once said it would price its entry level model at $80,000.
What ever anyone thinks of that, BBC’s Top Gear otherwise thinks the Karma is swell.
Or rather, the UK car reviewers that were once accused of staging a push-it-to-the-charger scene with the Tesla Roadster named the Karma the “Luxury Car of the Year” last month.
“Cleverness abounds in the Fisker and adds to the air of intelligent luxury. It works well, it looks good and it must be a genuinely exciting thing to own, said Top Gear magazine editor Charlie Turner, “It’s the top-of-the-line spec that features no leather, just textiles and reclaimed wood. And it’s more convincing than it sounds, managing to look, feel and smell premium without any cow peel in it at all.”
To keep selling these vehicles, the aspiring American startup announced Wednesday that former Ford Motor Co. executive Richard Beattie will head up its global sales and marketing as its Chief Commercial Officer.
From 2002-2007, Beattie, 57, was responsible for sales and marketing at Jaguar Land Rover North America and in 2009 he was promoted to Jaguar North America’s executive vice president of marketing and sales.
Previously, Beattie was vice president of marketing, sales, and service at Lincoln Mercury, and held senior management positions with Ford of Europe and Mazda Motor Corp.’s North American operations.
We don’t know if more Fisker hiring is on its way, but just yesterday, Fisker announced former Chrysler CEO Tom LaSorda will also join it as vice chairman.
LaSorda’s advisory position will be relied upon a day-to-day basis said Fisker CEO Henrik Fisker, as the company prepares its former GM plant in Wilmington to produce extended-range Project Ninas over the coming year.
Automotive News reported LaSorda will be chairman of the company’s strategy council.
“This is a huge coup for us,” Henrik Fisker said. “Tom is going to be a bit more hands-on than you would expect of a board member. He understands what it takes to be a high-volume manufacturer.”
LaSorda, 57, started with Chrysler in 2000 after having worked on the manufacturing side for GM for 23 years. He was named COO of Chrysler Group in 2004, and CEO in 2005.
This latest move to fortify itself with American executives is an indicator of Fisker’s stated commitment to grow as an America car company.
As you may recall, Fisker was loosely accused in a spate of reports for allegedly using taxpayer money to bring the Karma in from Finland, but those allegations have died down, and Fisker has rebutted them all.
Coda has in common with Fisker that it a striving startup based in California. Now also in common is its sedan – as has the Volt – has been added to the club of advanced-tech vehicles whose makers’ integrity has been questioned on political grounds.
And at the moment, what a couple of opinion writers are heaping on Coda sounds the most severe.
Coda
Yes, the allegations are positively sinister as written by China watchdogs Greg Autry and Peter Navarro and published by the LA Times.
“A Los Angeles firm has quietly assembled a Trojan horse electric car designed to carry the Chinese military-industrial complex deep into America’s auto market,” the writers offered in their introduction. “Detroit should be afraid, very afraid.”
Without pulling any punches, the op-ed piece goes on to say that a whole lot of misrepresenting is going on for an allegedly 65-percent Chinese-manufactured electric car being presented as “All American.”
“From a jobs perspective, the Coda’s arrival means this: American electric carmakers such as California-based Fisker Automotive and Tesla Motors, along with the GM Volt and Ford’s Focus Electric, will compete on home soil with a company benefiting from all of the unfair trade practices China has used to bury so many other American industries — from toys, textiles and machine tools to electronic assemblers and, most recently, solar panels. These practices range from currency manipulation to reported illegal export subsidies, counterfeiting, pollution and widespread worker abuses.
Taxpayers should be outraged because the Coda is eligible for the combined federal and state tax rebates on electric vehicles of $10,000 a vehicle, while China blatantly blocked the Volt from its Chinese green subsidy unless GM manufactured it in Shanghai and turned over design secrets.
These economic considerations notwithstanding, a closer look at Coda’s supply chain reveals a darker truth. The ‘new’ Coda is actually an updated variation on the 6-year-old Saibao from China’s state-owned Hafei Motor Co. Hafei is a division of Changan Automobile Group, which in turn is controlled by China Weaponry Equipment Group. This state-owned enterprise supplies China’s aggressively expanding military, and its parent, China South Industries Group, owns half of arms dealer Norinco, which reportedly tried to smuggle guns to Libya during the last days of the Kadafi regime …
The piece goes on to allege “Coda’s real backers” have transferred missile technology to Iran and tried to sell AK-47s to U.S. street gangs – and on behalf of its alleged front company, Coda CEO Phil Murtaugh, formerly head of GM of China, has raised more than $300 million.
The writers allege the car company working for those with blood on their hands has raked in money from banks such as Morgan Stanley, other private investors including former Clinton White House Chief of Staff Mack McLarty and former Goldman Sachs CEO Henry Paulson.
As Bush administration Treasury secretary, Paulson was allegedly complicit in “saddling up the Coda Trojan horse,” the writers contend, and his repeatedly refusing to call China a currency manipulator effectively shut down American businesses, and cost as many as three million American jobs.
What’s more, the writers allege Paulson is poised to profit from investments he made that will benefit from China’s currency manipulation and unfair trade practices while exacerbating the U.S. trade deficit and unemployment.
Whew! Yes a 530-word piece that started with a car seen at the LA Auto Show in a few short strokes made the leap to how America will be taken down. If it seems like a stretch, no doubt you could learn more by buying the writers’ book aptly called, “Death By China.”
For its part, Coda denies the allegations aimed directly at it as “grossly inaccurate,” and while not denying its Chinese sourcing, says nothing illegal or unethical is taking place.
The company’s Director of Corporate Communications, Larkin Hill spoke to us yesterday and said the op-ed was wrong about who owns or controls Coda, adding that by the end of the year the company will have 300 U.S. employees and like Tesla and Fisker, has been working under a “capital light business model.”
“We are not in any way owned by Changan Hefei,” Hill said.
Instead, she said, Coda’s aim is to benefit the U.S. people and to keep intellectual property in the country, but “being privately funded, the company has leveraged global relationships in order to bring a reasonably priced all-electric vehicle to market.”
And aside from answering queries about conspiracies, Hill said Coda is attempting to do business as usual.
The 2012 CODA is now available for $39,900 in California, and is indeed eligible for up to a $7,500 federal tax savings and California vehicle rebate of $2,500.
The battery electric sedan is speed limited to 85 mph and not as aesthetically thrilling as some other EVs, but its 36-kwh battery provides a class-leading 90-120 miles range on average, Hill said, and has been known to travel as far as 150 miles on a charge.
Hill said the imported cars receive final assembly in Benicia, Northern California and Coda intends to start delivering them in West Coast launch markets in the first quarter of 2012.
Meanwhile, Forbes Magazine just named Coda Holdings “One of America’s most promising companies.”
Source: GM-Volt.com
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Fisker hikes Karma price... again... now above $100k

When you're starting up a new luxury automaker – especially a high-end one – it's easy for prices to quickly escalate beyond their anticipated targets. And that's just what's happened with the Fisker Karma.
Way back when (in 2008), the upstart automaker was talking about selling the Karma for $80,000. Then, the initial base MSRP was set at $87,900 until Fisker raised prices again – and began taking orders – for its hybrid luxury at $95,900. As of this Thursday, even this price will jump by some six percent to $102,000.
That's for the base Eco Standard model, while the top Eco Chic trim level will now sell for $116,000. Those who put down deposits at the previous prices, however, will have another month to firm up their orders to get theirs at the original rate.
Source: Autoblog Green