People need to move around, but we can do it in a less impactful way with these five innovations. Some are new and some are old, but together they could remake transportation.
You might not think of toting your kids and their gear around in a $100,000 hybrid sports car wagon, but perhaps you should. You'll be the envy of the block.
The luxury electric car maker follows in Tesla's footsteps--with a Los Angeles storefront EV education center. You can't buy a car there, but you can get excited about one.
A new law in California would make it legal for Chevy Volts to use parking spots equipped with electric chargers. But does the law actually make it harder for electric car owners?
If you like EVs, you might also like this new array. That's the thought process behind the partnership between the automaker and SunPower, which will be offering a package deal at Ford dealerships.
To really get innovation we need to look at electric batteries in cars as distributed sources of energy for the grid that just happen to be on four wheels.
GM has autonomous, electric pods that can be summoned by a smartphone and will whisk you, hands-free, to wherever you want to go. They're almost ready, now we just need to wait for GPS to catch up.
Everyone has a price. But Americans have a wide variety of answers when asked how much they would be willing to pay for gas before grudgingly switching to electric cars.