With an adventurous Dutchman’s 60,000-mile journey recent completion
in Sydney, Australia, has the coming of age for the electric car finally
arrived?
By: Ringo Bones
Dutchman Wiebe Wakker’s amazing feat of traveling 60,000
miles (95,000-kilometers) via electric car reminds me of those automotive pioneers
during the early part of the 20th Century who drove early production
models of the Model T and similar early gasoline powered vehicles in trips that
stretched thousands of miles to prove that the automobile is a reliable form of
transportation. With the advent of climate change and “peak oil”, Wiebe Wakker
doing his part in a bid to prove the viability of electric vehicles in tackling
climate change, his name will undoubtedly be now associated with the early
automobile pioneers.
The tree-year trip was done on a modified Volkswagen Golf
that Wakker nicknamed “The Blue Bandit” across 33 countries in what he said was
the longest-ever journey by electric car. But Wakker’s three-year electric car “odyssey”
is also, so-far, the longest documented electric car trip. The three-year trip
from the Netherlands to Australia was funded by public donations from around
the world, including the electricity needed to charge the Blue Bandit as well
as food and a place to sleep. Wakker drove across a variety of countries and
climatic conditions that included Turkey, Iran, India, Myanmar, Malaysia and
Indonesia with the route determined by the prior offers he received on his
website before the trip began.
Wiebe Wakker’s choice to opt for a modified Volkswagen Golf
makes a lot of engineering sense because even in its original gasoline-powered
form, the VW Golf is known for its excellent power-to-weight ratio and in its unmodified form was often
known to beat 1970s and 1980s era Corvette supercars in a quarter-mile drag
race when driven by a driver of sufficient drag-racing skills. According to
Wakker, if the VW Golf remained unmodified, it would have consumed 6,785 liters
or 1,800 US gallons of gasoline to complete the epic three-year journey.
Wakker’s modified VW Golf can travel 200 kilometers on a
single charge, with Wakker saying that he spent just 300 US dollars on
electricity, much of it in the remote desert Outback of Australia. Wakker’s
raison d’être of his epic trip was to change people’s opinions and inspire
people to start driving electric by showing the advantages of sustainable
mobility. Wakker also said that “if one man can drive to the other side of the
world in an electric car, then EVs (electric vehicles) should definitely be
viable for daily use.”
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