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	<title>Comments on: X Prize Cup changes in the works</title>
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	<link>http://www.newspacejournal.com/2007/03/22/x-prize-cup-changes-in-the-works/</link>
	<description>Tracking the entrepreneurial space industry</description>
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		<title>By: Cosmic Log : Auto X Prize revs up</title>
		<link>http://www.newspacejournal.com/2007/03/22/x-prize-cup-changes-in-the-works/comment-page-1/#comment-125563</link>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Cosmic Log : Auto X Prize revs up]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Mar 2007 23:50:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.personalspaceflight.info/2007/03/22/x-prize-cup-changes-in-the-works/#comment-125563</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[[...] Posted: Friday, March 30, 2007 7:49 PM by Alan Boyle The multimillion-dollar Automotive X Prize is finally rolling up to the starting line after more than a year of tinkering. Draft rules for the competition, aimed at encouraging the development of â€œproduction-capableâ€ cars that get the energy equivalent of 100 miles per gallon, will be unveiled next week at the New York Auto Show. The X Prize Foundation is targeting a race between the prize finalists in 2009. The rules are due&#160;to come out during the auto show&#039;s press preview, which begins on Wednesday, and will be put out for a 60-day public comment period before they&#039;re set in stone, said Mark Goodstein, the executive director of the Automotive X Prize program. &quot;You only get one chance to release the final rules for a competition, and we want to make sure they are right when they are final,&quot; he told me on Thursday. &quot;This is an attempt to reach out to folks worldwide who would like to compete ...&#160;or have done this kind of thing before and know about the hidden land mines.&quot; Many of the details surrounding the rules are being held back until next week, but Goodstein said they won&#039;t lend themselves easily to a quick sound bite. &quot;Fifty pages is nothing to sneeze at,&quot; he said. Why do the rules have to be so complex? It&#039;s a tall order to&#160;create a contest that will truly reward breakthroughs in what&#039;s already one of America&#039;s biggest economic sectors. The organizers don&#039;t want to rule out any technology that can produce more efficient cars, whether that&#039;s&#160;biofuels, hydrogen, plug-in power, solar or just a better breed of fossil-fuel power. For that reason, the basic metric is the energy equivalent of 100 miles per gallon of gasoline, or 100 mpge, in a combination of city and highway driving. Defining how that will be measured, particularly for alternate energy sources, can get tricky.  The&#160;vehicles have to be marketable as well - so&#160;the ability to create&#160;a &quot;production-capable&quot; (as opposed to &quot;production-ready&quot;) car will be factored into the rules. If you have a brainstorm&#160;that involves driving mice around in a tinfoil-covered lifting body, or flying people around in dirigibles, you&#039;ll want to think again. Not that there&#039;s anything wrong with lifters or dirigibles, of course. For months, Goodstein and his colleagues have been struggling over whether the goal of the X Prize should be to reduce emissions, or reduce America&#039;s dependence on foreign oil, or increase energy efficiency. Here&#039;s how he encapsulated the Automotive X Prize&#039;s purpose this week:  &quot;This is a goal to inspire a new generation of super-efficient vehicles that will break our addiction to oil and stem the effects of planet change. That really is it. Those two goals have been the tent poles as we&#039;ve done our thing. ... &quot;The industry is stuck, and it&#039;s not anybody&#039;s fault. That&#039;s just the dynamic. ... Everyone points their fingers behind closed doors. We need to introduce a bright spotlight in a different location and get everyone to rush over there.&quot; Goodstein, a veteran of dot-com and e-commerce ventures, dared to use a chemistry metaphor - comparing the automotive industry to a supersaturated solution that&#039;s just waiting for a little push to&#160;churn out cool new stuff. &quot;One little thing can be put into it, and thkk!&quot; he said. Of course, the Automotive X Prize won&#039;t be just &quot;one little thing.&quot; In the past, Goodstein has said the competition&#039;s purse might have to be even larger than the $10 million spaceflight X Prize that was won back in 2004. This week he said his team wasn&#039;t yet ready to announce how big the purse will be, other than to say it will&#160;involve a multimillion-dollar payout. &quot;The purse is not insubstantial for the smaller teams, but they&#039;re really doing this for the exposure,&quot; Goodstein said. If the program develops the way Goodstein expects, that exposure would reach its height in 2009, when the X Prize Foundation would &quot;stage races to test the work of these teams in a very high-profile way.&quot; The Automotive X Prize is just one of the foundation&#039;s follow-ups to the original space prize - standing alongside the annual X Prize Cup, the&#160;$2 million Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge, the $10 million Archon X Prize for genomics and other projects that are still percolating. But if the automotive contest lives up to Goodstein&#039;s hopes, it could be the foundation&#039;s biggest world-changer. What do you think? Feel free to leave your comments below, and watch for updates in MSNBC.com&#039;s automotive news section. [...]]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[&#8230;] Posted: Friday, March 30, 2007 7:49 PM by Alan Boyle The multimillion-dollar Automotive X Prize is finally rolling up to the starting line after more than a year of tinkering. Draft rules for the competition, aimed at encouraging the development of â€œproduction-capableâ€ cars that get the energy equivalent of 100 miles per gallon, will be unveiled next week at the New York Auto Show. The X Prize Foundation is targeting a race between the prize finalists in 2009. The rules are due&nbsp;to come out during the auto show&#8217;s press preview, which begins on Wednesday, and will be put out for a 60-day public comment period before they&#8217;re set in stone, said Mark Goodstein, the executive director of the Automotive X Prize program. &#8220;You only get one chance to release the final rules for a competition, and we want to make sure they are right when they are final,&#8221; he told me on Thursday. &#8220;This is an attempt to reach out to folks worldwide who would like to compete &#8230;&nbsp;or have done this kind of thing before and know about the hidden land mines.&#8221; Many of the details surrounding the rules are being held back until next week, but Goodstein said they won&#8217;t lend themselves easily to a quick sound bite. &#8220;Fifty pages is nothing to sneeze at,&#8221; he said. Why do the rules have to be so complex? It&#8217;s a tall order to&nbsp;create a contest that will truly reward breakthroughs in what&#8217;s already one of America&#8217;s biggest economic sectors. The organizers don&#8217;t want to rule out any technology that can produce more efficient cars, whether that&#8217;s&nbsp;biofuels, hydrogen, plug-in power, solar or just a better breed of fossil-fuel power. For that reason, the basic metric is the energy equivalent of 100 miles per gallon of gasoline, or 100 mpge, in a combination of city and highway driving. Defining how that will be measured, particularly for alternate energy sources, can get tricky.  The&nbsp;vehicles have to be marketable as well &#8211; so&nbsp;the ability to create&nbsp;a &#8220;production-capable&#8221; (as opposed to &#8220;production-ready&#8221;) car will be factored into the rules. If you have a brainstorm&nbsp;that involves driving mice around in a tinfoil-covered lifting body, or flying people around in dirigibles, you&#8217;ll want to think again. Not that there&#8217;s anything wrong with lifters or dirigibles, of course. For months, Goodstein and his colleagues have been struggling over whether the goal of the X Prize should be to reduce emissions, or reduce America&#8217;s dependence on foreign oil, or increase energy efficiency. Here&#8217;s how he encapsulated the Automotive X Prize&#8217;s purpose this week:  &#8220;This is a goal to inspire a new generation of super-efficient vehicles that will break our addiction to oil and stem the effects of planet change. That really is it. Those two goals have been the tent poles as we&#8217;ve done our thing. &#8230; &#8220;The industry is stuck, and it&#8217;s not anybody&#8217;s fault. That&#8217;s just the dynamic. &#8230; Everyone points their fingers behind closed doors. We need to introduce a bright spotlight in a different location and get everyone to rush over there.&#8221; Goodstein, a veteran of dot-com and e-commerce ventures, dared to use a chemistry metaphor &#8211; comparing the automotive industry to a supersaturated solution that&#8217;s just waiting for a little push to&nbsp;churn out cool new stuff. &#8220;One little thing can be put into it, and thkk!&#8221; he said. Of course, the Automotive X Prize won&#8217;t be just &#8220;one little thing.&#8221; In the past, Goodstein has said the competition&#8217;s purse might have to be even larger than the $10 million spaceflight X Prize that was won back in 2004. This week he said his team wasn&#8217;t yet ready to announce how big the purse will be, other than to say it will&nbsp;involve a multimillion-dollar payout. &#8220;The purse is not insubstantial for the smaller teams, but they&#8217;re really doing this for the exposure,&#8221; Goodstein said. If the program develops the way Goodstein expects, that exposure would reach its height in 2009, when the X Prize Foundation would &#8220;stage races to test the work of these teams in a very high-profile way.&#8221; The Automotive X Prize is just one of the foundation&#8217;s follow-ups to the original space prize &#8211; standing alongside the annual X Prize Cup, the&nbsp;$2 million Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge, the $10 million Archon X Prize for genomics and other projects that are still percolating. But if the automotive contest lives up to Goodstein&#8217;s hopes, it could be the foundation&#8217;s biggest world-changer. What do you think? Feel free to leave your comments below, and watch for updates in MSNBC.com&#8217;s automotive news section. [&#8230;]</p>
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