Jefferson and Franklin knew where to look for good ideas: France. Even today, France continues to provide a model for American policy with the world's first electric car sharing program. Viva la France!
By Zach Arnold, Breakthrough Generation FellowThis post is part of our week-long Special Issue exploring ways to sever the link between transportation and oil by electrifying transportation. Stay tuned for more...
"The French are most advanced in all manner of Arts, and refined Conversation, and in the Use of electric Cars." - Thomas Jefferson, personal correspondence, 1786*
In honor of Independence Day, let's take a moment here at the
Breakthrough Blog to reflect on two of our greatest Founding Fathers -
Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin.
Brilliant and energetic men, Franklin and Jefferson were responsible for some of the greatest advances of their time, such as bifocals and the armonica. And the Declaration of Independence.
What's more, these two giants of American history shared an abiding
love and respect for France. Having served as America's ministers to
France in the late 1700s, both saw Paris's grandeur firsthand, and saw
in its creativity and intellectual ferment a model for their own
fledgling nation.
 |
|
 |
| The men themselves |
Jefferson and Franklin knew where to look for good ideas - and even
today, France continues to provide a model for American policy. How so,
you ask? WITH THE WORLD'S FIRST ELECTRIC CAR SHARING SCHEME, THAT'S HOW. Building on the success of Paris' Vélib bike sharing program, Paris mayor Bertrand Delanoë has announced Autolib, a program that will provide 4,000 electric vehicles (EV's) for use by Parisians.
The system will allow users to reserve cars and parking spaces
online, or simply pick a parked EV up on a whim. Parking and recharging
points will be spread throughout the city and suburbs, allowing a range
of movement that considerably exceeds Vélib's. And payment is a snap,
as customers can pay through a monthly subscription, a one-time fee, or
with a standard city transit pass. It sounds, in other words, like
American services like Zipcar,
but cleaner and more accessible - and, potentially, a great
demonstration of the usefulness of EV's, in urban areas and beyond.
As inventors, social innovators, and Francophiles, Jefferson and
Franklin would surely be proud - and unsurprised - to see that France
is today's leader in electric car sharing innovation. Hopefully today's
American policymakers will emulate our Founding Fathers, who looked to
France for inspiration. In the meantime, we can keep enjoying the other
things we've received from France, like wine and unintelligible philosophy. Vive la France!
*not really