Predictions are always difficult, especially about the future.
At the moment it is all controlled, or distorted, depending on your point of view, by the legislation. Currently we have a market for below 15 mph devices, which work well as electric assist bikes. These are never going to be and are not intended to be, replacements for cars or motor bikes, so its a limited market, at least in today's world.
Abover 15 mph, electric bikes have to compete head on with motor cycles and motor scooters, and the public will always choose the petrol motors, at least in today's world.
What could change it is two things. One is if the legislation made a new category for 30 mph, zero emission, personal transport machines. Then electric bikes or electric scooters would overnight be the things everybody wanted.
The other thing is Russ's point - what happens when energy is treated as a scarce or valuable resource? Then everything changes. Its no good then debating whether e-bikes can compete with cars, because the whole concept of a car no longer makes sense. The whole idea of travelling large distances to work disappears. In fact, even the concept of a road starts coming under scrutiny. Its all very well imagining the future, but the lesson of history is that change does not come from the direction you are looking in.
Nick
At the moment it is all controlled, or distorted, depending on your point of view, by the legislation. Currently we have a market for below 15 mph devices, which work well as electric assist bikes. These are never going to be and are not intended to be, replacements for cars or motor bikes, so its a limited market, at least in today's world.
Abover 15 mph, electric bikes have to compete head on with motor cycles and motor scooters, and the public will always choose the petrol motors, at least in today's world.
What could change it is two things. One is if the legislation made a new category for 30 mph, zero emission, personal transport machines. Then electric bikes or electric scooters would overnight be the things everybody wanted.
The other thing is Russ's point - what happens when energy is treated as a scarce or valuable resource? Then everything changes. Its no good then debating whether e-bikes can compete with cars, because the whole concept of a car no longer makes sense. The whole idea of travelling large distances to work disappears. In fact, even the concept of a road starts coming under scrutiny. Its all very well imagining the future, but the lesson of history is that change does not come from the direction you are looking in.
Nick