The
Atlantic concept features a glass roof with an X-shaped cross-brace
that Fisker says gives rear-seat occupants more headroom.
|
Fisker Automotive, facing funding issues and scrutiny from the
federal government, plans to delay the launch of its new model,
according to an industry Web site.
The Atlantic, the five-year-old startup’s second vehicle, was
unveiled last month at the New York auto show and was scheduled to go on
sale next year. But InsideEVs.com
said it had obtained documents meant for investors that indicate Fisker
now plans to have the vehicle on the market by mid-2014.
Fisker spokesman Roger Ormisher declined to comment on the Web site report, but wrote in an e-mail to Automotive News that the Atlantic is “very much part of Fisker’s future plans.”
But his language seemed to confirm that the old timetable was
history. He wrote that the company will be “confirming a new timetable
for the program” once it secures funding, from the [Department of
Energy] or elsewhere.
According to InsideEVs.com, the documents also reveal that the
Atlantic will have a sticker price of $50,000 to $60,000. Fisker
declined to comment on pricing in New York last month, but according to a
report in Autoweek, the car is expected to be priced below $40,000
after federal tax credits.
The Atlantic, which was known as the Nina during development, is a
plug-in hybrid with four-cylinder engine produced by BMW. It is meant to
compete with mid-sized luxury sedans. It has rear-wheel drive, but
all-wheel drive is an option.
The Atlantic’s delay would be the latest in a long string of troubles
for Fisker. The company was slow to roll out its first vehicle, the
$100,000 Karma, which is manufactured in Finland. DOE froze a $529
million loan to the Fisker last May after the company had received about
one-third of the allocated funds, which were meant to support its
American engineering efforts and to help introduce the Karma.
Fisker was scheduled to build the sedan in Wilmington, Del., but in
an interview with Automotive News in April, Fisker CEO Tom Lasorda said,
“The whole plan has changed.”
He added: "Wilmington is our primary site…but there are other
options. We have to look at what's best for the company and the
shareholders.”
Lasorda said the company would make a decision by the end of summer about where it would build the Atlantic.
Lasorda was named CEO in February and has been working to renegotiate Fisker’s DOE loan and to improve the company’s image.
In December the company recalled more than 200 Karmas because of possible problems with batteries supplied by A123 systems.
And in March, Fisker’s image took another hit after a Karma stopped working during a Consumer Reports test.
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