It was actually a pretty brilliant idea: Israeli entrepreneur Shai Agassi devised a plan to create an electric city with a power grid of easily accessible energy. Instead of consumers toiling to spend thousands upon thousands of dollars buying a car, they would purchase a more economical electric vehicle keyed into the energy grid. Next, consumers would allocate access to energy needed to power the car in the same way that people pay for cell phones. By simply topping up, a person could drive their vehicle anywhere, protect the environment, and participate in using renewable energy. Agassi’s Shangri-La was to be called Better Place.
At a time when gas prices are higher than many can afford and car prices – even for a used vehicle – soar above many households’ average annual income, Agassi’s Better Place is looking, well, better than ever. Vehicles running on electricity as opposed to fossil fuels could have saved businesses and consumers from absorbing the high costs of supply chain issues due to fuel demands. More importantly, the environmental impact of vehicle exhaust and its domino effect on everything from declining animal health to rising sea levels due to warmer climates from greenhouse gas emissions is a tricky genie to coax back into the bottle.
Silicon Valley and its international sister cities are home to a wide variety of innovative ideas, so when Agassi’s plan circulated around the tech community and its eager venture capitalists in the early 2000s, few could deny that he was on to something. Agassi’s conceptualized world would take the genius begun by Nikola Tesla when he created Wardenclyffe Tower and create a civilization unencumbered by the political wrangling brought on by dependence on foreign oil. Agassi had support from his own country, as well as investors galore. However, a few disastrous business decisions later, the venture shuttered. Still, there are three key reasons why environmentalists and entrepreneurs should revisit this iconoclastic idea.