We may not be able to buy Project   Better Place stock...
But a slew of publicly traded   companies are playing an integral role in the world's most ambitious electric   vehicle plan.
In fact, corporate campuses and employee homes at 19 of   Israel's top companies will become testing grounds for advanced EV   infrastructure.
And from these Middle Eastern hubs, multinational   companies can spread and adapt their EV strategies around the world.
For   instance, charging stations will be installed at the headquarters of Teva   Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:TEVA), the world's top generic drug maker.
What's   key here is that Teva also has offices in Mexico, Singapore, Brazil, Kenya, and   dozens of other countries. And in all of those places, Teva's corporate strategy   could mean spreading Better Place's EV infrastructure.
In 2009, Project Better Place is being propagated through the business world with the same sort of seeding strategy that Better Place CEO Shai Agassi first took to governments from Israel to Australia to Hawaii.
Among the other U.S.-listed partners for Better Place in Israel are Partner Communications (NASDAQ:PTNR), Orbotech Ltd. (NASDAQ:ORBK) and the local divisions of Nike and employment services giant Manpower (NYSE:MAN).
Car-Sharing and Electric Vehicles―Powerful Twin TrendsCorporate car sharing is an accelerating trend by itself, and EV plug-in stations make perfect sense as a twin technology. Pay-per-use services like Zipcar are becoming more and more ubiquitous, and traditional car rental companies like Hertz now moving into that market. Hertz spokeswoman Paula Rivera told the Boston Globe this week that car sharing is a "$1 billion market with potential to grow."
Shai Agassi put it this way:
"We are today seeing the certification   that there is real market demand for electric cars that will use Better Place's   grid. We expect demand to grow as Israeli companies join in the vision, as well   as in other countries, which together represent a potential global market of 50   million cars. We see today the tip of the iceberg of global demand."
What   Agassi didn't say is that we are at a time where demand is supercharged by   policy around the world.
Israel wants to end its use of foreign oil by   2020. The Obama Administration wants 1 million plug-in cars on the road by 2015.   The Danish government, one of Project   Better Place's early partners, has brought in IBM, Siemens, and   national energy company DONG to make 10% of Danish cars plug-ins within the next   decade.
Bringing car-sharing and EV infrastructure together means cars   with higher emissions will increasingly be taken off the road, increasing the   proportion of electric vehicles as international research projects and corporate   EV fleets advance.
We're bullish on Project Better Place, but until we   can buy stock in that one, we'll keep an eye out for more companies like Teva   that will benefit from growing EV fleets and Better Place's ever-growing   resources and research.
There are also other companies around the world making high-efficiency vehicle batteries. Though they may be seen as competitors to Better Place once it goes public, a rising tide lifts all ships.
Green Chip International subscribers are already riding the wave.
 
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