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Greek island to shift to electric mobility with VW

  (Agence France-Presse)
Athens, Greece
Thu, November 5, 2020

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Greek island to shift to electric mobility with VW Greece and German auto giant Volkswagen teamed up Wednesday to help the Aegean island of Astypalea junk polluting cars in favor of electric vehicles to boost sustainable tourism. (Shutterstock/Aerial-motion)

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reece and German auto giant Volkswagen teamed up Wednesday to help the Aegean island of Astypalea junk polluting cars in favor of electric vehicles to boost sustainable tourism.

The island's 1,300 residents and businesses will benefit from incentives financed by the Greek government to get rid of petrol and diesel cars, and VW will offer electric vehicles at low prices, a government source said.

Volkswagen said the project aimed to reinvent the island's transport system, with local bus service replaced by an all-electric year-round ridesharing service.

Many vehicles on the island are rentals to ferry the 72,000 tourists that visit each year, and the project aims to have visitors use the ridesharing system, which will include electric scooters and bikes as well as cars.

Read also: Volkswagen presents a mobile electric vehicle charging station

Deputy Foreign Minister Kostas Fragogiannis said the initiative was an example of how governments and corporations could work together to "promote climate protection, (and) apply innovative solutions to improve people's lives."

Volkswagen plans to install chargers across the island of 100 square kilometers. 

VW chief executive Herbert Diess said the network of electric vehicles "will improve the quality of life, while contributing to a carbon neutral future."

An OECD report published last month found that Greece had made considerable progress in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, but was being held back by the heavy reliance of islands on fossil fuels for transportation and heat.

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