Seems as though the thread has been slightly detoured, but I”ll throw my thoughts in.
I have had a Nissan Leaf 24kw Tekna for over two years.
Driven about 12,000 miles in that time.
Let’s get the more contentious issues out of the way.
Range, yep about 80 miles.
Home charging is great, all this talk about filling up at a petrol station taking say 10 minutes only, yep, home charging whilst the car is not in use. You can even set the timer overnight to make use of off peak charge rates.
Yep, long distances take some planning, but most people ( not all), drive within the range most of the time.
Oil is running out.
Burning fossil fuels are bad for the environment, especially in built up areas with high population density, they are bad for us.
People say the environmental cost of an EV car is the same as a fossil fuel car.....
Taking the initial manufacturing environment cost as being about equal, the EV car can “burn” any type of electricity....nuclear, coal,gas, wind, solar, hydro .
The fossil fuel car burns oil, which uses a lot of energy just to produce. Then it is typically sent around the world in big tankers. Then it is transported to petrol stations, then it is burnt by cars.
All this energy is burnt into the environment.
So, new technology to reduce emissions need to be invested in green energy, new charge network etc, will need time to achieve.
Zero road tax, very much reduced service costs. No DMF,no particulate filter,no oil.
Longer life brakes due to regen on the EV. Virtual silent.
We get typically four miles for every one kWh of energy. One kWh is approx 16p.
Made the commitment to being “more green” a while ago.
Solar panels on the roof, plus bought a Tesla Powerwall battery to reduce the strain on the grid and cost of electricity.
Electricity is going to cost more in the future.
Won’t suit everyone, but EV cars would suit a large proportion of the population.