Quote:
Originally Posted by eyecu2
All those things are true- but without incentives and adoptions of technology, things are reluctant to change. Remember newtons' law of objects that are "not in motion". Adoption rates on EV's is being incentivized both politically and financially. EV charging are one of the biggest investments in some areas of infrastructure according the NHI. Most larger electric companies who are investing in the grid, are putting them on as part of that incentive too. While adoption may take longer than a 5-10 years- technology will continue to evolve on both chargers and battery tech. (There are lots of new battery stuff happening right now also!) To make a comparison to Cell phone adoption- It was 1984-ish when I remember phones coming out. All of them were a grand or more, were analog, had big units, or a bag to sit in the car. Worked like shit, cause of low amount of towers> fast forward- the cell tower map is almost over 75% of populated areas. still not at 100%. While the EV market starts out slow, it will see the same type of adoption IMHO, and charger stations will be just like those cell towers as they start growing. They won't replace it for everyone's driving needs, but the technology for some charging while driving is already in the works. WHo knows what brainiac out there is gonna be able to harness.
In general- those companies who invested too quick in the EV market, may pull back the throttles a little bit in the short term, but there is an appetite for going away from GAS and emissions- despite none of it being perfect.
What about a national electric program for nuke plants to supply the electric grid- regulated to minimize prices etc. but also built using large scale project funding by the govt>?? The federal highway system started that way too. Maybe it's time to think bigger instead of rolling the calendar back to 1940 mindsets of cars and gasoline in general.
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Thanks for your rational response to real issues.
To summarize my position: I do believe in that old saw: "If you build a better mouse trap, the world will beat a path to your door.".
Automobiles of various types were being made in the late 1800s and on into the 20th Century. But they were an unreliable luxury. Henry ford in the USA and others in Europe changed that with relatively relabel and more importantly, affordable machines. No one had to coerce a wide swath of the American public to adopt this new technology. The advantages and benefits of owning a Model-T sold the cars to city folks and farmers alike.
This happened rapidly in the US. Ford's first offering was in, what . . .1910 I think. Five years later, when the Army chased Pancho Villa back into Mexico in 1915, they brought a number of Modl-T^s along as well as a Wright Flyer.
In Europe in this same time frame, the city of Paris was saved from German occupation when the city's fleet of civilian owned Taxis was mobilized to bring reservists to the front.
If the technology is
that good and it fills a
real need, there is no need for incentives be they financial or political
My evaluation of the current situation is that the concept of an all-electric society, including electric cars and scooters is just not at that point where people will
momentarily drop their savings into that technology on a large scale. Most folks do not see a cost-effective banafit in that direction.
OH, and I too am a longtime proponent of natin wide nuclesr power.