The Number That Stops You in Your Tracks
When you scroll through the VoltEV database sorted by city consumption, one entry immediately stands out: Lightyear 0 — 9.7 kWh/100km. The next closest competitor sits at around 13–14 kWh/100km. That gap isn't incremental — it's an entirely different class of efficiency.
To put it in perspective: the average electric SUV in our database consumes around 20–22 kWh per 100km in city driving. The Lightyear 0 uses less than half of that. With a 60 kWh battery, it could cover over 600 km in city conditions on a single charge — in 2022.
Record context: 9.7 kWh/100km means the Lightyear 0 needs only 9.7 units of electricity to travel 100 kilometers — roughly equivalent to the energy in one liter of petrol, moving a 1,575 kg car 100 km. No production EV before or since has matched this figure.
The Four Pillars of Extreme Efficiency
The Lightyear 0's record didn't come from a single breakthrough. It was the result of four engineering decisions working together, each one making a significant contribution.
1. Solar Panels — The Passive Charger
The most visible feature of the Lightyear 0 is its 5 m² of curved solar panels covering the roof and hood. These aren't decorative — in ideal conditions they can generate up to 70 km of free range per day. In the Netherlands (not exactly a sunny climate), the car could go two months without plugging in. In Spain or Portugal, up to seven months.
The solar contribution reduces net consumption, but it's not the whole story. Even without solar input, the base efficiency of the drivetrain is extraordinary.
2. Aerodynamics — Built Like a Bullet
The Lightyear 0 has a drag coefficient (Cd) of just 0.175 — among the lowest ever measured on a production vehicle. For comparison, the Tesla Model S sits at 0.208, and the Mercedes EQS (another efficiency champion) at 0.20. The Lightyear 0 achieves this through an elongated teardrop shape, camera-based side mirrors instead of traditional wing mirrors, smooth underbody panels, and carefully sculpted wheel covers that minimize turbulence.
At highway speeds, aerodynamic drag becomes the dominant energy drain. By slashing Cd to this extreme, the car's highway consumption drops dramatically.
3. In-Wheel Motors — No Drivetrain Losses
Rather than a central motor sending power through a gearbox, driveshaft, and differential, the Lightyear 0 uses four independent motors built directly into the wheel hubs. This eliminates all mechanical transmission losses between motor and wheel — typically 5–15% of total energy.
The trade-off is performance: with 174 hp total and torque optimized for efficiency rather than acceleration, the 0–100 km/h sprint takes 10 seconds. But for a car designed to minimize energy consumption, this is a feature, not a flaw.
4. Light Weight + Low Rolling Resistance
At approximately 1,575 kg, the Lightyear 0 is remarkably light for an executive-sized EV with a 60 kWh battery pack. The body uses recycled carbon fiber panels and carefully selected lightweight materials throughout. Combined with specially engineered low-rolling-resistance tires, every watt of stored energy goes further.
How It Compares: City Consumption
Here's how the Lightyear 0 stacks up against other notable EVs from our database in city driving:
Full Technical Specifications
| Specification | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| City consumption | 9.7 kWh/100km | Database record — lowest ever |
| Highway consumption | 15.8 kWh/100km | Exceptional at speed |
| Battery capacity | 60 kWh (usable) | Modest — efficiency does the work |
| WLTP range | 625 km | More than most 100 kWh+ packs |
| Solar area | 5 m² | Up to 70 km/day from sun |
| Drag coefficient | Cd 0.175 | Lower than any other production car |
| Motor type | 4× in-wheel | Eliminates drivetrain losses |
| Power output | 174 hp / 130 kW | Optimized for efficiency, not speed |
| 0–100 km/h | 10 seconds | Deliberately slow |
| Top speed | 160 km/h | Limited to preserve range |
| Curb weight | ~1,575 kg | Light for an executive EV |
| AC charging | 11 kW | No DC fast charging |
| Price | €250,000 | Limited to 964 units planned |
| Units produced | ~12 | Production stopped after weeks |
The Tragedy: A Record-Holder That Almost Nobody Owns
Here's the painful irony: the most energy-efficient production EV ever made barely made it into production. Lightyear was a Dutch startup founded in 2016 by a team that grew out of a solar racing competition at Eindhoven University of Technology. After six years of development and raising significant investment, the Lightyear 0 finally entered production at a Valmet Automotive factory in Finland in late November 2022.
Production rate was one car per week. The plan was to build 946 units at €250,000 each. But the economics never worked. Manufacturing costs exceeded projections, and the company simultaneously announced the Lightyear 2 — a €40,000 mass-market model that generated 40,000 consumer reservations and 20,000 fleet pre-orders within days.
January 2023: Lightyear halted all Lightyear 0 production. The subsidiary responsible for manufacturing (Atlas Technologies) was declared bankrupt by a Dutch court. Only approximately 12 cars had been completed.
The company attempted a restructuring, raised €8 million from loyal investors within 24 hours, and promised to focus entirely on the Lightyear 2. But that model also never reached production. The Lightyear 0 became a footnote — a technical masterpiece that exists in barely a dozen driveways worldwide.
What the Lightyear 0 Proved
Despite its commercial failure, the Lightyear 0 demonstrated something important: extreme efficiency in EVs doesn't require a massive battery pack. The obsession with stuffing larger and larger batteries into vehicles to chase range is not the only path. A 60 kWh battery in an aerodynamically optimized, lightweight platform with solar assistance can outrange vehicles with 100 kWh+ packs.
This philosophy is influencing the next generation of efficient EVs. The Mercedes Vision EQXX concept (which achieved 1,000 km on a single charge) drew directly from these ideas. Lucid Air's extraordinary efficiency figures owe something to the same principles. The idea that you don't need more energy — you need to waste less — is slowly gaining ground in the mainstream.
The Lightyear 0 holds a record in our database that may stand for years. Not because no one can beat 9.7 kWh/100km — but because almost no one is trying to.
Looking ahead: Lightyear's successor model, the Lightyear 2, promised 800 km of range at under €40,000 with improved solar technology. Whether it ever reaches production remains to be seen. The technology lives on — the question is whether it can survive the brutal economics of the car industry.