I don't think Zero will sell many bikes in Europe if there's a Brammo dealer next door offering the Empulse for €1k less. I'm not sure Zero is a standout when comparing $ to € pricing, though.
Edit: the below are comparing units directly, not doing currency conversions.
Apple's products are typically priced 5% higher in euros vs USD.
Ex: 15" Retina Macbook Pro
$1799 USD vs
€1879Honda's bikes are typically priced 5-10% higher in euros than USD.
Ex: 2013 CBR1000RR
$13810 USD (+ tax, shipping) vs
€15090 (+ shipping I think, Überführung?)
BMW's bikes are more mixed, priced anywhere from 10% lower (R1200R) to 10% higher (K1300S, S1000RR).
I'd love to see Brammo sell the Empulse at €15k in Europe and make a profit .. compared to other gas bikes, that would put it over $3000 cheaper than in the US (not counting the federal credit). For that matter, I'd love to see the Saietta reach market .. it has some kick-ass specs, and I think it would be a more interesting comparison target for the Empulse than the Zero bikes.
However, let me throw this out there too: about a year ago I started making a fuss about the Empulse pricing being unrealistic. I guessed $16995 for the 9.3 kWh model
back in March before final specs were known (though I was dead wrong about the cell configuration and the lower-tier model) .. and then $17k
in April (again, wrong about the lower-tier model) and $17550
in May after specs were known but before the price had been adjusted from the old Empulse 10.0 $13995 price.
I say this to lend a little weight when I say that the Empulse european pricing feels
very optimistic. Brammo would need to significantly streamline assembly, manufacture the bike at Flextronics in Europe, and obtain higher volume discounts on parts in order to hit the sub-€15k price point. I'm not saying it's not possible, but if Brammo sells the Empulse in Europe in 2013 then I would not place bets on them meeting that price point.