Teslag said:
nortex97 said:
You don't actually have to keep proving to us that you are fully on board and a true believer who feels compelled to correct any wrong-thinkers.
We know.
Really.
Care to point out where I'm wrong? I've said numerous times that EV's are the absolute wrong choice for many people. You can simply get a better ICE fit in many instances for most buyers than you can with an EV. I can be objective, you can't.
Yes, somewhere on this thousand page thread you've probably restated that little theory that 'the vast majority of folks only need 300 miles of range a day' a dozen times. It neglects the exceptional cases where more is needed, maybe for a family trip or move 3 or 4 times a year. But whatever, stick to your use case, I'm merely pointing out you…aren't convincing anyone with it any more than your militant belief in the vaccines did (on every thread about them).
But keep doing it, it makes me laugh.
You also neglect/ignore the massive investments and damage to the planet/human labor force required to mine all of the materials/minerals to build all these EV's, trash the batteries within 10 years, and all the charging infrastructure, including in apartments/condos/cities. But I know, that's just…you being 'conservative' or something.
More seriously, I am just trying to add to the discussion instead of rehash a lame debate with you where you and GAC will no doubt insist on having the last post today,
so here: Quote:
Mark Tapscott has an interesting piece today at PJ Media titled "Three Huge Reasons Why Electric Vehicles Will Never Dominate American Roads." Tapscott's reasons are all good ones, which I would summarize as (1) despite vast government subsidies and rebates, EVs are still far more expensive than gasoline-powered cars, (2) even with greatly increased sales, the existing gasoline-powered cars will not go away and will still be on the road and the dominant vehicles in 2035 and even 2050, and (3) the increased amounts of necessary minerals for the batteries, from lithium to nickel to cobalt, are never going to materialize. Key quote:
[All the] federal tax credits are available to help obscure the fact that EVs remain extremely costly for consumers and offer unproven maintenance and reliability records. No wonder that, despite the immense pressure being put upon consumers to buy EVs, they still only make up about seven percent of all new-vehicle purchases.
Let me generalize from that. The current automotive sector of the economy represents thousands of elements coming together via private markets to satisfy customer demand. Each of the elements falls into place because someone perceives an opportunity to make money by providing that element. As just one example, gas stations don't exist because the government ordered them up, but because entrepreneurs perceived that they could make money by building the stations and buying the pumps and making gasoline available at that location at a price that would cover all costs and allow for a profit.
Contrast that to what is now supposed to happen for electric vehicles. The government is allegedly going to be paying for some half a million charging stations around the country. Maybe that's happening, but I don't notice any of them around where I live. And why does the government have to do this? If the demand were there, entrepreneurs would already be installing the stations. It turns out that the stations are quite expensive to construct (at least the "fast charging" variety), and then you can't really mark up the electricity that has to be purchased from the local utility. So it has to be done with government subsidy.
And in the next step, the same thing happens with the charging stations that happens with every other government-ordered business: the stations break down, and since no one makes more money to be sure they keep running, they don't get fixed. Among many, many articles on this subject, here is one from August 2022 at The Verge, headline "Electric vehicle owners are fed up with broken EV chargers and janky software."
Quote:
Similarly, who has the incentive to be sure that there is sufficient electricity on the grid to recharge all the EVs when the owners want to charge them? In the gas car arena, oil companies make big money by finding and refining and delivering the product to the places where the customer wants to buy it. Over in the EV arena, the same jurisdictions like New York and California that presume to order up an all EV fleet also organize their grid on a central planning/regulated price model. Reliable fossil fuel power plants are ordered to be closed, and replaced with intermittent wind and solar generation. The all-knowing regulators then order that everything shall be electrified, and somewhere the little people are supposed to respond and make it happen, without any appropriate economic incentive. We shall see.
Name calling, LOL. I don't have to, you chose your own username.