It's nothing to do with total amounts of electricity (at the moment)..
Open your eyes Flecc. There are massive issues with our infrastructure regarding charging stations, well lack of and maintenance. So much so that they are now affecting EV sales and second handf values. Government need to sort it before it stalls our progress. Getting to chargers at this stage with so few on road shouldn't be a problem.
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My eyes are the open ones.
I sometimes wonder why I bother, I've covered all this before in answers to you. There are inevitably twerps buying EVs when they are totally unsuited for what they want to do.
Let them suffer their foolishness. Meanwhile, the shortage of EVs with year long waiting lists means all they are doing is depriving others much more suited to ownership.
Half of all the cars on the road almost never travel any real distance. For starters all the household second and even third cars, getting shopping and running the kids to school and activities etc. That is a big enough market to absorb all the e-car production for decade yet and they are the ones who charge at home all the time, making that 83%.
The problem of on road chargers is greatly exaggerated due to the aforementioned twerps. There's no problem for those like me who do their homework. Before buying I checked out the two longer routes I would want to take and confirmed that the number of nearby alternative charge points in case of failures was more than adequate. In fact I have never found a failed charge point yet in five years.
There are certainly many routes not yet adequately covered and some areas where charge point failures and even sabotage are commonplace, the latter curiously mostly in the north. But caveat emptor, anyone who buys an e-car without first checking this out is a prize twerp. As are all those buying EVs when they have no idea what routes they will be driving. For the moment they should stick to IC or plug-in hybrids.
Meanwhile, contrary to the popular alarmist story, charge points are increasing at record rates and much of the country is well covered already. Quote:
"At the end of February 2023, there were 38982 electric vehicle charging points across the UK, across 23066 charging locations. This represents a 33% increase in the total number of charging devices since February 2022."
Up a third in one year. Compare that to the remaining 6000 ic fuel stations left now, EVs having nearly four times as many public locations to charge.
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