By Lucinda Elliott and Marco Aquino
MONTEVIDEO/LIMA (Reuters) -When Peruvian green energy entrepreneur Luis Zwiebach wanted to buy an electric vehicle in 2019, he flew 4,000 miles to California to test drive Tesla’s Model 3 sedan. But Tesla lacked an official importer and he couldn’t find a way around Peru’s complex vehicle import procedures.
He was not deterred. “There was a gentleman who had already imported one and wanted to sell it,” Zwiebach said. “So I went to see it, and I bought it.”
Charging the Tesla initially proved difficult at his friend’s beach house outside Lima. “The car wouldn’t charge because there was no grounding device,” he said. “We grabbed a fork, stuck it into the soil to make a ground — and the car charged.”
Today, it’s not so hard to take the plunge on an EV i

WMBD-Radio

People Top Story
The Texas Tribune Crime
ABC11 WTVD Politics
AlterNet
Fast Company Lifestyle
The Cut
Essentiallysports College Sports
Raw Story