That's assuming batteries of the not too distant future continue to rely on lithium, which if your aware of battery tech and where its going, won't be the case. There are already advancements in battery chemistry that will take us away from a reliance on lithium to instead use graphene, which is graphite, used in pencils and in abundance through the planet. Lets not also forget that in 15+ years time we may well have the technology to "exploit" local asteroids for minerals which would certainly help a lot.
I take it you don't live near a coastline. There are offshore wind farms everywhere I can see now - a huge amount of investment has been taking place.The lack of investment for our electricity infrastructure is worrying.
You reckon Elon isn't thinking about this already. I mean - the guy also runs a space agency.There’s optimism and then there’s nipping to a local asteroid for a lump of colbalt.
You say suddenly, then 2040 in the same sentence. You realise that 2040 is a few years away, right?So every house of every type is suddenly going to be able to charge and ever car park etc will suddenly be able to cater for this by 2040...sorry just not gonna happen.
Realistically it's going to be the end of the century before we see the end of petrol.
It's got as much chance of happening by 2035 as HS2 has of being completed on time and within budget. ONE electric train and they can't even get that right. Compared to converting the whole country to EVs that is a small project.
Moving the population to electric cars is a slow process. It has to be a no-brainer for people.
An electric Peugeot 208 is about £8,000 more than a petrol version. If you apply available discounts and purchase on pcp finance with no customer deposit, the electric is £479 per month and the petrol is £309. For most people the petrol version is still by far the most appealing.
Moving the population to electric cars is a slow process. It has to be a no-brainer for people.
An electric Peugeot 208 is about £8,000 more than a petrol version. If you apply available discounts and purchase on pcp finance with no customer deposit, the electric is £479 per month and the petrol is £309. For most people the petrol version is still by far the most appealing.
I take it you don't live near a coastline. There are offshore wind farms everywhere I can see now - a huge amount of investment has been taking place.
You really think that the government won’t tax transport electricity ?
Get a solar panel installation and charge for free, no tax at all then.
Sorry but for me to have a EV it has to be charged at home at a minimum. I don't often go into a city center and there isn't one super market near that that provides charge ports. I work for massive company and again no charge points either.Of course not and you do not need every house or every parking space to be a charge point. All you need is a steady increase in charge points to match the increasing in EV's on the road.
All you need is a number of different parking/charge options and then you pick the most convenient one for yourself. You do not need 100% of parking spots turning into charge points. For example based on the average drive most people could just park at there local supermarket once a week, do the shopping once a week and have enough charge to do the weeks drive until the next weekly shop. Supermarkets will steadily increase the amount of parking points converted over as EV numbers increase. Same for parking lots they will just steady increase the charge points.
With an EV you can just drive to my local city, park up as I would with an ICE car in the multistory car park only with the EV getting fuel as I do whatever I have gone to the city for. Then leave the city on a full tank and drive home. Not that I need to as I have a driveway. But without a driveway that would cover the weekly charge I would need and I tend to go to the city once every 2 weeks. So if I did not have a drive away I would just alternative between the supermarket shop charge and the city park charge and be covered all year long without wasting any time at a patrol station.
In many areas is now easier to get your EV charged up then it is to get to a patrol station and get fuel. In my area its go to the supermarket free charge point, go to the cinema, food eating out places, pubs, parking lots, even drive deep into the forest and the car parks all have charge points. Go out for one nice meal at our favorite Indian restaurant and the EV is charged up for the week.
You do not need them all you just pick one of them once a week for the average driver. Its faster and easier then going to the patrol station as you are already planning to go to that location so just park up as normal.
I know some areas are lagging behind more then others but overall the amount of charge points are increasing monthly. Its getting more common to find it easier to get to a charge point then a patrol station.
Will take forever to charge with a few solar panels, especially in the UK lol