According to a new survey by Ernst & Young, 48% of new car buyers say they plan to get a hybrid, plug-in hybrid, or full EV—but an unexpected adoption barrier has emerged.
I definitely am, but battery longevity and recyclability problems are still largely unsolved.
I’m willing to compromise with a plug-in hybrid so that all the short trips can be fully electric but I can still have long drives with gas.
I bought my car in 2010 and it’s still running strong. Eventually when I replace it, I am hoping they uave a fully electric model of it. I can’t justify spending 25-30k for a car at the moment.
While EVs are fantastic, and a needed step in the right direction. Having a good public transit system, and walkable/bikable cities and towns will do far more to help the environment.
EVs are still in their infancy and Americans being Americans won’t buy one as an ICE replacement unless it can go as far as their old gas guzzler and fill up in about the same time. That and the infrastructure is abysmal and it’s much worse when you consider that charging stations for non-tesla EVs are generally borked at slow charging speeds if they even work at all.
The only reason I’m even considering an EV for my next car is because there’s still going to be an ICE car at the house for long trips and it’ll get me where I need to go on a full charge for daily use without any issues. Sadly, where I live means that if you don’t have a car, you can’t participate in society otherwise I’d be fine without a car period.
I just don’t want to have a car, but alas this is America…