http://www.sunjournal.com/news/news/2015/05/07/rock-down-electric-avenue-eco-friendly-vehicle-expo/1698126
Rock down to electric avenue to eco-friendly vehicle expo
Erin Place  | May 7, 2015

[images  / Erin Place
http://www.sunjournal.com/files/imagecache/medium/2015/05/05/Electric_Car_Garbo.jpg
Fred Garbo stands beside the electric car charger in downtown Norway with
his Nissan Leaf plugged in recently. People will be able to test drive the
Leaf and four different types of electric cars on Saturday during the town's
first ever Electric Vehicle Expo.

http://www.sunjournal.com/files/imagecache/medium/2015/05/05/Electric_Bike_004.jpg
Green Machine Bike Shop co-owner John Harvey tries out the electric bike he
has available at his shop, which is similar to ones that are available for
test riding at Saturday's first ever Electric Vehicle Expo in downtown
Norway.
]

NORWAY — Those tough Oxford Hills inclines may leave you huffing and puffing
and thinking you need to hit the gym. While training will help, there's an
easier way out — the electric bike.

The public will get the chance to try them Saturday at the first Electric
Vehicle Expo in downtown Norway.

The electric bikes, along with five different electric cars, including the
Nissan Leaf, a Smart Car, BMW i3 and possibly a Telsa, will start at 10 a.m.
at Longley Square, across from the Norway Opera House on Main Street. The
expo runs until about 1 p.m.

The event, hosted by the Center for an Ecology-Based Economy, will feature a
solar-powered tractor and farm cart that has an inverter and allows power
tools to be run from it, along with other electric-powered vehicles.

Center Executive Director Scott Vlaun owns an older model electric bike he
rides to Sweden once a week for work. The electric part of the bike helps
him get up the large hills the area is known for.

“It's a lot, lot easier, a lot, lot faster. You don't need any fancy gear, I
ride in my work boots and my work clothes and I get out there and I get some
exercise because you're always spinning the peddles. It's easy on the knees
and I don't get out of there all sweaty and have to change out of my cycling
clothes,” he said.

“The technology around the electric bicycle, I think, is revolutionary and
it's opening up bicycling commuting to tons and tons of people who never
could imagine themselves commuting on a bicycle because it's too far,
there's a big hill or something, and it ... shortens distances and levels
out the ground having an electric motor,” Vlaun said.

Using an electric bike — the battery is removed and plugged in at home — is
the equivalent of getting 300 mpg in a traditional motor vehicle.

On Saturday, there will also be a ribbon-cutting – also referred to as a
commissioning – for the town's Level 2 electric car charger, which was
voluntarily installed by master electrician and town Fire Chief Dennis Yates
in July 2014. The Level 2 charger has 240 volts and takes about four hours
to fully charge an electric car.

The commissioning, set for 11 a.m., is a formal way to thank Town Manager
David Holt and the Board of Selectmen for approving the project, which made
Norway one of this first municipalities in the state to offer free electric
car charging.

The event also thanks local “EVangelist,” or electric vehicle enthusiast,
Fred Garbo for providing signs and materials for the station and for working
with Revision Energy, which donated the charger.

It will also thank Revision Energy, Yates for his time in installing the
station and Zizi Vlaun for creating and painting the EV symbol on the
parking lot. Food and coffee will be provided by downtown Norway's
Jennicakes Bake Shop.

Scott Vlaun, who dubbed Garbo the EVangelist because he drives a 100 percent
electric Nissan Leaf, also called him a “mover and a shaker.” And yet Garbo
called the four men deeply involved in the electric vehicle and solar power
movement “movers and groovers.” They include Barry Woods of Electric
Mobility NE, Fortunat Mueller of Revision Energy, Naoto Inoue of Solar
Market and Dylan Voorhees of the Natural Resources Council of Maine.

“We really would like you guys to come up and support a very small town,
which is doing the right thing,” Garbo recalled writing to the group via
email. “Norway is plugged in.”

Vlaun and Garbo and their colleagues at the Center for an Ecology-Based
Economy are part of a small but growing movement of those driving and riding
electric vehicles in Oxford Hills and beyond.

“It is obvious if you have a charger in your town, people will come. If you
offer it for free, then they really might come, and while they're there,
they might shop and give our town some business,” Garbo said. “Norway is
paying it forward to allow other electric vehicles to come to us.”

While no one officially monitors the town's electric vehicle charger, Vlaun
said he's observed at least six out-of-town vehicles using the station that
he didn't recognize. Part of the agreement with the town is if the electric
cost becomes too much, the center would garner the electricity needed by
installing solar panels on the station.

“Part of me is hoping that that thing just starts going around the clock so
we can put solar panels in the town square,” Vlaun said with a smile.

Holt said Tuesday he's projected the town will pay between $60 and $100 for
electricity for the car charger in 2015 because the charger hasn't had a ton
of use. If that cost increases to the hundreds of dollars, then something
different will have to be done, he said.

There are 302 electric vehicles registered in Maine, according to Shawna
Searles, maintenance and bulk data developer with InforME, which manages and
tracks this kind of data for the state.

Vlaun has no delusions about people simply switching over from
gasoline-powered vehicles to electric ones overnight — the cheapest ones
start at $29,000 — or that electric vehicles will end the world's dependence
on fossil fuels.

“We're really not just going to replace the fossil fuel-driven automobile
paradigm with electric vehicles," he said. "It's really not feasible. But
electric vehicles can be part of the solution,” he said.

Green Machine Bike Shop in downtown Norway offers an electric bike for sale.
But Vlaun said he would like to see Oxford Hills become a manufacturing hub
for these vehicles since area residents have the skills to build them.

“It would open up this field a lot more people,” he said. “Not just for
recreation but alternative transportation.”

Garbo and Vlaun agree that electric vehicles are only truly eco-friendly
when they're powered with clean energy. That's why when Garbo purchased his
electric car three years ago, he had to figure out a way to charge it by the
sun. But he lived in a heavily wooded area on Norway's North Pond. Enter
farming friend Rick Morse, who has tons of open field space. Garbo now
leases a piece of his land for his solar-powered tracker, which moves with
the sun through a GPS component to garner as much energy as possible. Garbo
said he doesn't really have an electric bill anymore since he runs the
electricity for his house from the same device.

“He's living the dream,” Vlaun said.

For more information about the Electric Vehicle Expo, call CEBE at 739-2101
or visit www.ecologybasedeconomy.org.
eplace @sunmediagroup.net
[© sunjournal.com]
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