Dr Annette Winkler, head of Smart (left) with fashion designer Jeremy Scott unveiling the SmartForJeremy show car - a version of the new Smart Fortwo electric drive. Picture/Getty Images
Turn up, plug in, join motoring's social revolution. UK writer Matthew Bell asks if drivers should be doing the Smart thing.
As recently as five years ago, electric cars seemed like an eco pipe dream. They arrived promising a green revolution, but were expensive and flimsy, and looked unlikely to replace the combustion-engined car.
But, as thousands of enthusiasts gathered over the weekend for "smart times 13", the world's biggest micro-car convention, industry experts now say that electro-mobility is becoming the norm, not the exception.
Certainly, if the crowds at the Buochs military airport in Switzerland were anything to go by, this is no longer just for the avant garde. T-shirt-wearing men and women of all shapes and ages, including 300 Britons, had travelled from around the world to the Swiss lakes. They camped, they played volleyball, they ate candyfloss, and they showed off their pimped rides.
"We may seem like geeks, but it's fantastic fun," said Briony Baker, who had driven with her husband, Robert, 60, from Chichester in West Sussex.
"Our children think it's a bit geeky, but what other manufacturer puts on an event like this?"
The Bakers came in their rare Crossblade model, of which there are only 25 in Britain. (The lack of a windscreen and roof could be a reason.)
"We wear motorbike helmets. We had a lovely drive over the Alps."
Smart cars celebrate their 15th anniversary this year and, though most are conventionally powered, the theme was electro-mobility. Last year, Smart launched an electric bicycle in Britain, and there are plans for an electric scooter. Almost all car makers are investing in the technology. Can Smart foresee a time when all cars are electric?
"No, I can't," says Dr Annette Winkler, the global head of Smart. "But electric drive will become more and more important for urban mobility, and it's now becoming more affordable with a scheme where you buy the car but hire the battery."
Dr Jorg Beckmann, the chief executive of Swiss eMobility, which campaigns for electric motoring, says cars are becoming part of the public transport network through share schemes.
"There is a social change as well as a technological one," he says. "The typical car before had an internal combustion engine and was privately owned. Now, it could be electrically powered and be part of a car-sharing scheme. We are talking about a transformation of the entire transport infrastructure."
"You need to be able to offer them the same services that are already in place for combustion-engined cars," he says. "In Switzerland, road infrastructure is funded by fuel tax, so that's a problem."
Dr Winkler says the Chinese market is growing. "They are crazy for it," she says, "It's our third biggest market, after Germany and Italy."
Smart times has become a major annual event. Next year's could be in Britain, as Brighton is shortlisted. "We'll do something even if we don't win," says James Hemson, 24, who is helping the campaign. "There are thousands of Smart Club UK members. Once you drive one, you realise how fun they are."
Dr Winkler agrees. "Smart has always been a polarising brand. People used to ask, does the world need a car like that? Now we have produced 1.5 million of them, and will soon launch the next generation."
Whether electro-mobility will ever replace the conventional engine remains to be seen, but it is certainly here to stay.
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