https://www.electrive.com/2019/06/27/police-not-charged/
Police not charged
Jun 27, 2019  Carrie Hampel

[image  
https://www.electrive.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Tesla-Model-S-Polizei-Luxemburg.jpg
Luxemburg Tesla police EV
]

In Luxemburg, a Tesla police car ran out of battery power on a public
highway. Usually running out of fuel on a highway in the rather small and
very wealthy European country will incur a fine. But since there are
currently no regulations against empty batteries, the police got away with
an embarrassing moment.

The officers explained that they were trying to run down the battery to
service the vehicle – Electric cars must have their batteries run down every
20,000 kilometres in order to keep up the maintenance.

The incident, however, was paid some attention in the Luxemburg
parliamentary sitting. In response to a question submitted by Luxemburg’s
Pirate Party MP Sven Clement, the Minister for Mobility and Public Works,
Francois Bausch answered cooly that the police should in future carry out
their maitenance drives closer to service centres.

Still feeling empty? We’ve reported on two operations to help stranded
electric car drivers or car sharing operators, should their vehicles run out
of charge when out and about – In the UK motoring organisation the Royal
Automobile Association (RAC) can now help stranded EV drivers with a mobile
charging unit, and in Berlin, Chargery is riding out on electric bikes to
charge electric car-sharing vehicles in any location in the city to make
sure batteries are optimally charged when required.

Even so, the likelihood of running out of battery in the small country with
a total population of around half a million people has also diminished
somewhat since charging network operator Chargy set about expanding their
charging network in Luxemburg.

[comment
    ty-fawkes    27.06.2019 um 16:33
    Wow, I’ve been driving a EV since mid-2011. This is the first time I’ve
ever heard of ” Electric cars must have their batteries run down every
20,000 kilometres in order to keep up the maintenance.”. I have never (and
never would) run a battery flat. I have friends who’ve been driving Teslas
for years and they’ve never mentioned anything like this. Besides if you
were going to do such a crazy thing, wouldn’t it be prudent to plan ahead
and have a chase vehicle or some way to recover the vehicle on standby? This
is just stupid.] ... [© electrive.com]
...
https://www.google.com/search?q=Luxembourg+police+Tesla
 search  Luxembourg police Tesla
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-luxembourg-tesla/luxembourg-police-deploy-tesla-cars-to-help-nab-criminals-idUSKBN1KA1I0




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