Holden tells us journalist types that New Zealand is the ideal place for electric cars because not only is 80 per cent of our power generated from renewable resources, but 85 per cent of Kiwi homes have a garage - and therefore the basis of an excellent recharging infrastructure without really trying.
That's all very well, but I don't qualify. I do have a garage - a double one - but half of it is full of a Skoda and the rest is home to a city of boxes full of stuff simply too precious to dispose of. I know this because I've been told several times. Failing to make this groundbreaking electric car welcome in the car-home (as I like to call a garage) is a roundabout way of giving the Volt a great compliment. Because, quite aside from the extended-range aspect, having a garage full of boxy car and boxes was no impediment to electric motoring.
Volt is the only electric car on the local market that can be charged using a standard three-pin power supply, so I threw the cord through the kitchen window and plugged it in next to the Nespresso, whenever I happened to be home.
This was not merely a matter of convenience but also a stunningly clever metaphor for the cost of a recharge: Holden reckons it costs about the same as a cup of coffee to charge the Volt from empty. Coffee is cheaper at home of course, but then you have more of it. So I reckon we're still about right.