I imagine that at least due to immature charging infrastructure, there's a natural limit to demand for electric vehicles.
That's another problem. And the transition will die on its way as it's planned by central planners. Hybrid cars seem to be a winning strategy as a growing niche so far
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hybrid cars are like the sliding phones with physical keyboards.
they are growing slower than battery EVs, and will be obsolete in a decade.
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We'll have to watch it. The germans as the biggest facturers over here seem to shift towards them, at least.
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all the gas car manufacturers are shifting, the ones with vision and competence are making the full shift to EVs.
the followers who cannot innovate are taking half measures to appease gas companies.
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Diesel is still an economic source of energy. Central planners can't change economics.
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diesel is expensive and toxic. EVs will eat their market share too.
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diesel is on demand and easily stored. What form or energy production isn't expensive??? Photovoltaic and wind turbines? Only nuclear energy, which most countries have ignored and defamed.
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have you ever charged an EV?
But isn't nuclear growing by global capacity?
But what do You say about the arguements that the transition can't be done economically and the econ will crash half the way or that their ecological footprint is horrible like Armstrong e.g argues? 'The National Renewable Energy Laboratory at the US Department of Energy believes the US needs 1.2 million charging stations by 2030, with the White House aiming for 500,000. They have built SEVEN charging stations.'
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i say they are wrong.
why would the white house build EV chargers? that’s 7 too many if you ask me.
tesla has over 50,000 and there are dozens of competing networks rapidly scaling all over the world.
oh, and basically every single outlet that already exists can be used to charge an EV too. no adapters needed.
It's clearly a big fight now behind the scenes on EU level
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