📊 Company Information
💰 Entrepreneur's Ask
📈 Sharks' Investment (Final Deal)
Zero Pollution Motors Net Worth
Zero Pollution Motors was valued at $10 million when pitched in 2015. However, the company is now essentially defunct with near-zero net worth. No production facilities were established in the U.S., no street-legal vehicles were manufactured, and promised delivery dates repeatedly passed without result. The business serves as a cautionary tale of ambitious clean-tech promises that failed to materialize in the real market.
Ethan Tucker and legendary recording artist Pat Boone pitched Zero Pollution Motors on Shark Tank Season 6 in May 2015, seeking $5 million for 50% equity, valuing the company at $10 million. The product was the AIRPod—a compressed-air vehicle designed as a clean, affordable urban transportation solution.
The AIRPod is a lightweight, three-wheeled fiberglass vehicle powered entirely by compressed air. Production costs range from $3,700 to $5,100 per unit, with a retail price of $10,000. Each vehicle features a 100-mile range per charge, top speed of 50 mph, and produces zero emissions.
Charging is simple—drivers plug it into any standard outlet using an electric compressor, with refill time approximately three minutes. The vehicle primarily targets urban commuters seeking eco-friendly short-distance transportation
Mark Cuban, Daymond John, Lori Greiner, and Kevin O’Leary all declined, citing concerns about limited licensing (restricted to Hawaii only) and questionable scalability. Robert Herjavec made the only offer—$5 million for 50%—but contingent on securing full U.S. licensing rights. The deal ultimately collapsed when it became clear those expanded rights weren’t available.
Despite the failed deal, Zero Pollution Motors continued operations. They took pre-orders through their website and promised U.S. deliveries beginning in 2024. However, those promises never materialized. As of November 2025, no production vehicles have been manufactured in America, and the Facebook page hasn’t been updated since 2018.
Zero Pollution Motors essentially failed to materialize as a significant business. The company now primarily sells air-powered golf carts rather than street-legal vehicles. The original AIRPod remains in development limbo by parent company Motor Development International (Luxembourg-based), which has been promising production since 2000 without delivering a single commercially available vehicle.
