The license plate on Shawn Otto's Tesla Model S reads: NOT GAS.
He blasted air conditioning and music from his electric vehicle at the entrance of the Stone Arch Bridge on Tuesday, showing off its touch-screen navigation center and its roominess, unencumbered by engines. He calls it Car 2.0.
"It's hard to imagine that electric vehicles will not completely revolutionize transportation over the next decade," Otto said at an event that pushed the benefits of emissionless cars, such as his, sponsored by the climate-advocacy group Environment Minnesota.
Electric vehicles are becoming hot commodities nationwide. More than 190,000 electric vehicles have hit U.S. roads, and sales have spiked 500 percent in past two years, according to Environment Minnesota.
According to the Electric Power Research Institute, the state had about 2,400 electric plug-in vehicles as of 2013. Per capita, Minnesota is among the top 10 states with the highest numbers of electric vehicles in the country.
Minneapolis is making things even easier for electric-car owners: In May, the city finished installing 36 charging stalls downtown, totaling 39 stalls near downtown parking ramps. Drivers pay parking rates and for using the electricity — about $. 80 an hour. To fully charge a vehicle takes about four hours, or $3.20 in electricity, the city said.
In May, Minnesota became the first state in the country to mandate investor-owned utilities give discounts to customers who charge their vehicles in off-peak hours, which will start in 2015. These utilities must also offer an option for only renewable energy charging, said J. Drake Hamilton, science policy director for advocacy group Fresh Energy.
"This law is a win-win-win," Hamilton said. "It's a significant savings to customers, an extraordinary market opportunity for electric utilities and timely action for Minnesota."