Why electric cars are finally taking over

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  • Опубліковано 14 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 681

  • @DWPlanetA
    @DWPlanetA  2 роки тому +65

    Are electric vehicles becoming popular where you live?

    • @Chris-sm2uj
      @Chris-sm2uj 2 роки тому +17

      no

    • @kunalbhardwaj1668
      @kunalbhardwaj1668 2 роки тому +4

      Yup, you didn't consider the fact that in India, there are more 2W as compare to 4W and lots of people are shifting to them. New brands with better technology are coming up with better products to cater Indian and world 2W market here.
      When it comes to 4W, so far there were less options available for general public but that is set to change very fast in next 2-3 year with brands like Tata and M&M are ready to launch more products to cater different customer segment.

    • @kunalbhardwaj1668
      @kunalbhardwaj1668 2 роки тому +2

      That 50000 figure you gave is with just 4 car models from 3 different companies with all of them in cost well above normal Indian buyer. Once more car models and companies will bring product in market, the S- Curve is bound to happen here in India.

    • @MikeG-nz8gt
      @MikeG-nz8gt 2 роки тому +3

      Rapid adoption of EVs here in Newport RI. A few years ago there where a few on the road. Now 25% are EVs.

    • @feuerherz007
      @feuerherz007 2 роки тому +5

      Sadly yes

  • @omenapora43
    @omenapora43 2 роки тому +100

    Just in the last year or so, the amount of fast chargers in Finland has exploded. Owning a BEV myself made me realize how rapid the progress really is.

  • @osmund10
    @osmund10 2 роки тому +208

    Writing from Norway, we are indeed on a different planet: Electric cars passed 80% of new sales this summer, and few people even consider an alternative for their next car. The secret initially was government subsidy, but now it is improved charging infrastructure that makes the difference. And how does it effect your thinking once you have one? It's all upside down: you think service costs, smoother ride and silence, no smells, better performance, less complexity - and cannot imagine why anyone would drive that other stuff. I used to love petrol cars, manual gears, so I am as surprised as anyone.

    • @silveriver9
      @silveriver9 2 роки тому +3

      👍👍👍

    • @mikeshafer
      @mikeshafer 2 роки тому +9

      Love this. Norway, you are talking from the future!

    • @flutterflowexpert
      @flutterflowexpert 2 роки тому +2

      I was in Norway last month and I didn't know that all electronic cars numbers their plain number beging with E. Which is great I think all country have to adopt that logic.

    • @12kenbutsuri
      @12kenbutsuri 2 роки тому +11

      That is awful, electric cars are so bad for the environment compared to public transportation.

    • @mikeshafer
      @mikeshafer 2 роки тому +13

      @@12kenbutsuri gas cars are awful for the environment compared to public transportation. What is your point?

  • @sumitadvo2140
    @sumitadvo2140 2 роки тому +73

    In my country India, two wheelers are catching up fast than four wheeler..probably because they are cheaper...but one segment which beats gasoline vehicles is e-rickshaw..now they can be seen everywhere and numbers of gasoline rickshaw depleting day by day..battry they used is also normal chemical battry not litium ion..

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 2 роки тому +9

      By chemical battery do you mean lead acid? Lead acid batteries cost less up front but cost significantly more per stored kwh over the lifetime of the battery and that is before you have to consider the lower efficiency and higher weight.

    • @Amuzic_Earth
      @Amuzic_Earth 2 роки тому +3

      @@garethbaus5471 that used to be the case, but most new 3ws are sold with lithium ion batteries now.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 2 роки тому

      @@Amuzic_Earth That makes sense.

    • @satyamkatiyar8200
      @satyamkatiyar8200 2 роки тому +3

      @@Amuzic_Earth are you sure about lithium-ion batteries in newer E-rickshaws? because that would make them much more expensive also I don't think there's a need for a lithium-ion battery in them as they don't need to cover that much distance.

    • @Yatukih_001
      @Yatukih_001 2 роки тому

      In my country terrible accidents and fires caused by electric cars resulted in a decision by people who purchase cars to focus their attention on other options.

  • @HomesteadEngineering
    @HomesteadEngineering 2 роки тому +25

    Here in Florida, I shopped around and none of the dealerships have them in stock. If you do find one, the dealers mark them up by $10,000. I have two electric vehicles on order: VW ID.4 and a Cyber Truck. The ID.4 is set to deliver by the end of 2022 and Cyber truck is maybe end of 2023.

    • @That-Guy_
      @That-Guy_ 2 роки тому

      I have a CyberTruck preorder too.
      I am ~430k in line.

    • @brucemacneil
      @brucemacneil 2 роки тому

      So - manufacturers are making them as quickly as possible and expanding production as quickly as possible. Demand far outstrips supply and the dealers and being their parasitic selves.
      Charging is becoming more nearly ubiquitous and reliability is improving.
      All indicators point to EV.

    • @thejusticeisinthedetails8744
      @thejusticeisinthedetails8744 2 роки тому

      A video titled "EV charging and hurricanes: What drivers should know before evacuating"

  • @Angeloflight444
    @Angeloflight444 2 роки тому +41

    I’ve been seeing more and more electric vehicles in Greece, Athens where I live too. Not enough to make a difference in air quality but enough to notice on the streets. Which is kind of crazy considering the financial situation in Greece. But I agree. We need to make it in a way that we don’t need cars as much and we also make other forms of transportation viable like bicycles and stuff. At least for heavily congested cities with extreme levels of pollution.

    • @johnblacksuperchemist2556
      @johnblacksuperchemist2556 2 роки тому +3

      New Dawn Healing .......QUESTION............How does burning coal/fossil fuels to make electric for electric cars help the environment???????????????????????????????????????????????????

    • @Angeloflight444
      @Angeloflight444 2 роки тому +3

      @@johnblacksuperchemist2556 Good question!! It doesn’t! If you produce electricity only with fossil fuels then it might be even worse. A quick google search says that only 34% of the initial energy of coal reaches your house in the form of electric energy. If we factor in the losses of electric vehicles (after a quick Google search) that is 15-20% and so from the energy we started we are at about 28.9% to 27.2% efficiency. Now I imagine these are rough numbers and obviously I have not done the measurements myself. But consider this. A petrol car they say is efficient at around 30-35% but that too is misleading because this happens when it only operates under a specific load and engine rpm. If you are stuck in traffic that number could be as low as 15%. Which compared to an electric vehicle is worse. So I know the numbers are rough but it seems that from an efficiency standpoint they are about the same if we factor in the losses of a coal power plant and the grid. The only gain in that situation would be that you are not breathing the exhaust fumes directly from the exhaust of the car and the air in the city would be generally cleaner. BUT and that’s a big BUT in reality electricity nowadays isn’t produced exclusively by burning coal. Natural gas, nuclear power, hydropower and renewables are also used so the overall “mixture” let’s say is cleaner. I will not give exact numbers because it gets too complicated for a UA-cam comment. I am not saying that electric cars are super clean but the numbers show they can be cleaner than internal combustion cars. They are not the answer by a long shot but they are a step towards the right direction. As I mentioned in my comment I think we need to reduce car usage where we can. For example today I used an electric bicycle for a ride because my motorbike is broken. It definitely is NOT the same, the bicycle is much slower but I think it has its uses and we shouldn’t disregard them. I don’t know if that answers your questions but I do hope it gives some food for thought. Ultimately the cleanest option is to just walk or use a traditional bicycle but that is kinda primitive in my mind. Until we manage to teleport ourselves by psychic powers we are inclined to use technology to travel faster than our bodies allow.

    • @elijah420stuffs2
      @elijah420stuffs2 Рік тому +1

      I'm happy for you my Greek friend! Greetings from Italy

    • @Angeloflight444
      @Angeloflight444 Рік тому

      @@elijah420stuffs2 Greetings to you too friend! Much love! ♥🙏

  • @geirvinje2556
    @geirvinje2556 2 роки тому +17

    Her in Norway the sales was :
    2,3 % gas cars.
    3,8 % diesel cars.
    19,1 % hybrid cars (with pluggin hybrids).
    74,8 % Electric cars (100% electric).
    And, gas stations are dying.
    Some goes over to be Charging stations, some just dies.
    So, in 2030 i think people comming to Norway must plan where to get gasoline.
    And, because of the truck, and lorries that are going over to electrictrisity, there will be problematic to get diesel to.

    • @lemongavine
      @lemongavine 2 роки тому +1

      I have been predicting that this will happen. Glad to see it’s already happening in Norway

    • @thespalek1
      @thespalek1 2 роки тому +1

      ..but giant soot producing cruise ships still roam fjords I guess?

    • @BlackMambo5
      @BlackMambo5 2 роки тому +3

      @@lemongavine Well, one obscure country =/= all countries of the world. Especially considering absolute number of people -- Norway's irrelevant in the grand scheme of things considering most countries in Asia have a far high population than Norway's mere 5.4 million people, that's a drop in the ocean. So most countries in Asia, South America and Africa will still rely on dependable cheap and easily available ICE cars.

  • @BogdanStroe
    @BogdanStroe 2 роки тому +13

    In Romania Dacia Spring is selling very well: a small and cheap electric car ideal for city drives.

    • @dt8101
      @dt8101 2 роки тому

      Dacia Spring EV are made in China and exported to Europe. That's why it is so cheap.

  • @sayvorie
    @sayvorie 2 роки тому +31

    I never expected to see public charging ports and EVs in Jamaica; as well as the Chinese marketing one of their top EV brands in Jamaica. I’ve seen mainly Tesla on the road; but also Honda. However, I suspect that the Chinese, BYD, will soon dominate the market with its price point.

    • @jamaicasysbm2580
      @jamaicasysbm2580 2 роки тому

      We still not buying those EVs European or Chinese internal combustion engine that’s what we want

    • @sayvorie
      @sayvorie 2 роки тому

      @@jamaicasysbm2580 aren’t electric cars still significantly more expensive that combustion engine vehicles? Jamaicans love to copy world trends to feel relevant. It’s just a function of time.

    • @jamaicasysbm2580
      @jamaicasysbm2580 2 роки тому

      @@sayvorie affordability and being cautious is dictating the buy motives

    • @sayvorie
      @sayvorie 2 роки тому

      @@jamaicasysbm2580 okay I believe I indicated that already. What’s your point?

    • @jamaicasysbm2580
      @jamaicasysbm2580 2 роки тому

      @@sayvorie your argument was with respect to EV purchasing I was revealing to you the situation on the ground the people of the do not want EVs.

  • @ScottAtwood
    @ScottAtwood 2 роки тому +26

    I live in the San Francisco Bay Area, and adoption of EVs here seems to be well on its way towards the diffusion stage of the S-curve. There are LOTs of EVs on the road, more every day, and more and more public chargers.

    • @ScottAtwood
      @ScottAtwood 2 роки тому +8

      @@patrickfitzgerald2861, California has one of the lowest per capita energy consumption rates of any state in the US, and our energy consumption is growing at a slow and steady rate. Furthermore, most EV charging happens at night when overall electricity demand is quite low.

    • @mikem4984
      @mikem4984 2 роки тому +2

      @@ScottAtwood but isn't energy production also low due to no sunlight and little wind? It seems likely that having millions of EVs charging every evening would create even more demand than during daytime business hours. And using battery power at night only magnifies the destruction of the environment from the mining of the elements required for batteries. Not to mention the increase costs due to massively increased demand because of gov't mandates for EVs. One size doesn't fit all. Just trying to understand our options better.

    • @ScottAtwood
      @ScottAtwood 2 роки тому +2

      @@patrickfitzgerald2861 according to the California Energy Commission, total power generation in 2021 was up 2% year over year. Yes, peak generation during the recent heatwave hit all time highs, but that was only during a brief time when all time high temperature records were being set across the state. That doesn’t mean that the overall electricity demand over the course of the year will change that much. We still have a quite mild climate in most of the state for most of the year.

    • @ScottAtwood
      @ScottAtwood 2 роки тому +3

      @@mikem4984, the wind blows at night too. California has a diverse electric production grid, also including nuclear, hydroelectric, and geothermal, which provide steady, predictable, carbon free caseload power, so even when the sun goes down, we don’t need to rely exclusively on solar-charged batteries to supply the grid.

    • @ScottAtwood
      @ScottAtwood 2 роки тому +4

      @@patrickfitzgerald2861 what I learned from the events of the past few weeks is that the anthropogenic climate crisis is now having severe and unmistakable consequences that can no longer be ignore. We need to collectively end all carbon emissions, and do so as quickly as possible, so we can avert the worst future scenarios. Decarbonizing the transportation sector means we need to get people out of gas burning cars. Some of those cars will need to be replaced by zero emissions motor vehicles like EVs or hydrogen FCs fueled with green hydrogen. But it also means evolving our land use policies so that people live closer to jobs, schools, and shopping. It means investing in pedestrian and bicycle facilities, so people have active transportation alternatives that are safe and pleasant. It means investing in high quality mass transit, so people have safe, pleasant, and dependable transit options.

  • @Pjrdjf
    @Pjrdjf 2 роки тому +19

    Coming from India, i see a good potential for electric cars in cities, because we have higher idling times and frequent braking due to poor infrastructure and poor rule discipline and fuel is highly taxed. However the cost of EVs are prohibitive and people have "range anxiety". Still there are some educated people who are taking the leap of faith. Government is also giving a gentle push by subsidising the cost of the vehicles, but they need to do more for standardising the charging infrastructure and building it.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 2 роки тому +4

      That does seem like a nearly ideal place to electrify vehicles especially in the cities.

    • @abmstudio3678
      @abmstudio3678 2 роки тому

      Yeah, these numbers in the video sound like old news, I don't know about absolute number of EVs (though I am sure there are more than 50,000 now), but the percentage of new cars being bought is certainly a little higher than one percent now.

    • @Tential1
      @Tential1 2 роки тому +2

      You don't have the electric grid for it. The adoption of evs is going as fast as it should. If it goes faster, you break something else.
      Like here in Cali, with our rolling black outs

    • @lancethrust9488
      @lancethrust9488 Рік тому

      YOU HIGH EVS ARE TERRIBLE PLUS INDIA IS BIG EVS WILL NEVER HAVE THE RANGE , DUE TO THE LAWS OF PHYICS AND THERMODYNAMICS , DIESEL BY FAR THE BEST WE GOT AS ITS MORE EFFEICENT THAN LITHIUM BY ENERGY DENSITY NOT TWICE AS GOOD OR TEN TIMES TRY DIESEL IS 163 TIMES BETTER FOR ENERGY DENSITY THAN HIGHLY VOLATILE LITHIUM !!!

  • @StaceKarussos
    @StaceKarussos 2 роки тому +7

    I live in Portland, Oregon and have been driving all electric since 2011. Even a decade ago, lack of infrastructure is not really a problem since 99% of my charging is done at home. I don't really like long road trips. There are a lot of EVs where I live now. It's not a niche anymore. There are still myths people believe that need to be corrected so adoption increases even faster.

  • @jadeyjung
    @jadeyjung 2 роки тому +8

    i really enjoy you guys' handling visualization
    digitally, physically, and playfully for sure
    keep going!

  • @bingosunnoon9341
    @bingosunnoon9341 2 роки тому +8

    EVs are for the most part maintenance free. Companies that sell petroleum fueled cars make profits from their service networks. Service is expensive.

  • @SaveMoneySavethePlanet
    @SaveMoneySavethePlanet 2 роки тому +22

    Here in America charging infrastructure is definitely the biggest need. When I bought my car I was scared because I don’t actually have a place to plug in overnight.
    Luckily, my area has a great charging infrastructure so I can leave my car at the grocery store (2 blocks away) for half a day to charge back up when I need to! More people need this option. I’ve also been super impressed by how much of a charge I can get off of a fast charger while I go eat a sandwhich and stretch my legs for 30 minutes! This makes 4-5 hour long road trips not really a problem in my EV.
    All that being said, there are still lots of fundamental issues with cars in general whether they’re gas or electric. I actually just recently released my own video on the topic which dives more into that side of things. I think it pairs nicely with your video in order to give a fully well-rounded analysis of the pros and cons of EVs.

    • @Fenthule
      @Fenthule 2 роки тому +3

      Well, your BIGGEST need is a national high speed dual line rail system. But that's unrealistic with the current mindset. Locally every city *should* be focusing on Transit Oriented Development or TOD, but sadly in North America few places are, and instead favor personal vehicles, urban sprawl, and destination shopping centers. But yeah since you are soo car centric, advances to your grid are absolutely going to need to happen.

    • @Diana1000Smiles
      @Diana1000Smiles 2 роки тому

      I live in Montana. Obstructionist Republicans run the Show and they're definitely religiously deluded. Our State Sign will soon read: Welcome to the Past.

    • @Nicholas-f5
      @Nicholas-f5 2 роки тому

      @@someguy2135 EV charger access at rentals is required by law in CA

    • @Nicholas-f5
      @Nicholas-f5 2 роки тому

      @@someguy2135 crapitalism

  • @rsfrozen1
    @rsfrozen1 2 роки тому +11

    Good stuff... I have a lot of fun watching it...
    I live in Malaysia... Our government just given a tax holiday for about 2 years for EV that requires fully import. Suddenly all the dealership start to import EV inside (officially appointed brand dealer or under grey import (mostly Tesla))
    Our infrastructure wise are getting better, we have a lot more AC public charging compared to DC, but things are improving as I know

  • @legostud
    @legostud 2 роки тому +76

    Electric Cars went out of fashion when the electric starter was invented eliminating the need for a crank start, which was difficult to accomplish and caused injuries.

    • @SaveMoneySavethePlanet
      @SaveMoneySavethePlanet 2 роки тому +9

      Yea that’s when gasoline cars officially became more “efficient” from a time perspective. Before that, electric cars technically saved you more time if you were doing lots of little hops around town in order to run errands and whatnot.

    • @ninjanerdstudent6937
      @ninjanerdstudent6937 2 роки тому +6

      Too bad the video researchers did not discover that point.

    • @Nicholas-f5
      @Nicholas-f5 2 роки тому

      Cadillac is to blame

  • @marijnpater
    @marijnpater 2 роки тому +11

    Couple of questions!
    1. How do they measure the amount of C02 emissions from producing cars? Do they only count the production of the cars or also the mining and refining of raw materials into account?
    2. Would it be better to drive a newly produced electric car instead of old fossil fuel car that has already been produced?

    • @kevindevlieger300
      @kevindevlieger300 2 роки тому +2

      Asking the real questions...
      To add another aspect to the first question.. What about the energy they use? Is is green? If so... How clean is green energy truelly? Do they take into account the CO2 emissions from producing the solar panels, wind turbines,...? I'm afraid we might be surprised that it's more about consumption and less about the climate.

    • @Beowulfsg
      @Beowulfsg 2 роки тому

      I guess question is does moving to EV make sense if one is looking at a climate change perspective and this question I would say no, the model of everyone having their own individual cars would not be suitable in the grand scheme of things. Increasing public transport and last mile transport should be the optimal way imo
      Few reasons why the shift to Ev is not practical in the long run
      The earth does not enough minerals to replace even a fraction of ICE cars already in existence for starters.
      Efforts to recycle the parts of a electric is still widely challenging, meaning it be way easier to strip out nature and mine for minerals
      Maintaining road infrastructure and other car related consumables (Tires) still require a huge amount of crude related products
      For It would probably be more practical to focus the limited minerals we have to green electrification (i.e using neodymium for more wind turbines as opposed to millions of electric cars), energy storage capacity, copper etc. Improving public transports while phasing out individual cars eventually. Redesigning of population centers to reduce needless transportation and road infrastructure
      End of day most innovations mainly go to feed endless consumerism as per how capitalism was designed, there will claims about self driving cars, better battery technology, fusion energy, easier recycling etc to feed a hope of the future to this drive endless consumerism (greenwashing?) How much time is needed to deliver these promises is anyone's guess.
      Ironically even if more efficiency was produced from a shift to electric cars its shown all efficiencies will fall into Jevons paradox
      This is a good video on the subject
      ua-cam.com/video/vn9Vl0G53lA/v-deo.html

    • @longdang2681
      @longdang2681 2 роки тому

      @@glennjgroves Your coal powered EV analysis is missing the fact that EV's weigh more than ICE cars when transporting the same people. EVs have to push a bigger weight to make the same road trip. The volvo report shows that EVs have a small advantage when considering emissions. It is most definitely better to keep on using an old ICE car than buying a new EV(or new ICE car for that matter). People keep on playing down the effects of a new EV battery. The CO2 emissions of creating a new EV battery is massive. And if you ever buy 'just' a new battery for your EV that is yet another massive amount of CO2 emissions. People need to address the big emission problems of an EV battery because once created, it's not going away.

    • @longdang2681
      @longdang2681 2 роки тому

      @@glennjgroves EVs are currently ill equipped to replace ICE cars(in general) as they are best suited for city journeys. This would explain why the take up in china is relatively good(many small EVs sold), but I would expect the take up in America to not be so good as Americans would need to make longer car journeys that small EVs cannot manage on a single charge.

    • @Nicholas-f5
      @Nicholas-f5 2 роки тому +1

      Old cars are shown to be so polluting that it's better to crush vs repair them.

  • @hnt510
    @hnt510 2 роки тому +4

    I'm in Shenzhen, China. I bet everyone in the comment section haven't seen more EVs than me. We have electric cars, buses, taxis, trucks, metro and BYD. I strongly suspect that the city is pumping more EVs than the entire Europe in a year.

    • @Angeloflight444
      @Angeloflight444 2 роки тому +1

      Thank you for sharing your experience! I have never been to China and it’s refreshing to hear what’s happening there too. 🙂

  • @nicktheocharis126
    @nicktheocharis126 2 роки тому +9

    i live in greece. A few years back seeing an ev here out in the wild was a weird and rare occasion to say the least, maybe one or two highend model S and Xies per city. But this year, i dont know how but ev's are an everyday sight, and i am not even from the capital, athens. Ev's are sertainly gaining speed here too

    • @Al3xki
      @Al3xki 2 роки тому +1

      EUR 2.40 a litre for Unleaded 95 probably explains it

  • @legostud
    @legostud 2 роки тому +28

    Do the facts for EV adoption in India and East Asia include the adoption of electric scooters or are they just for cars? I know the electric scooters / mopeds with swappable batteries are fairly popular over there.

    • @cobaltblue2756
      @cobaltblue2756 2 роки тому

      Staggering number of start-up I've seen never before here in Indonesia i couldn't wait to jump in, but the market haven't do the favor enough , only fraction of influencer and big corporation but not in mainstream people especially in the small town where i live, i did see hybrid tho but not that much..

  • @johnr5252
    @johnr5252 2 роки тому +38

    It’s amazing that the internal combustion engine has lasted this long. Think about it: we’re converting a series of miniature explosions into motion. It’s amazing actually. And modern engines have so many moving parts. So complicated and ultimately inefficient.
    In 10 years, you might be able to buy a used ICE vehicle. And finding fuel for it may be a challenge.

    • @legostud
      @legostud 2 роки тому

      Easy reason. Oil industry has made $2 billion US dollars a day in profits on average over the last 50 years. That’s enough money to squash any corporate or government attempt to kill the internal combustion engine.

    • @amitcarbyne3635
      @amitcarbyne3635 2 роки тому

      @@thelonewolf666 more like 30 years

    • @martinandreaskruse4446
      @martinandreaskruse4446 2 роки тому

      That scenario is maybe 20-30 years into the future. Some of the sold cars right now, will still be driving around in 10-20 years, but sure, in Norway it might be in 10-15 years time, meanwhile it's longer for other countries that haven't adopted as many EVs yet.

    • @caesar7734
      @caesar7734 2 роки тому

      Synthetic fuel will always exist.

    • @geirvinje2556
      @geirvinje2556 2 роки тому

      With $840.000 in subsidies a second (IMF numbers), and a cartel that are backing oil. Is this really strange?
      Oil, and fossile cars are a waste of resources. The people in the oil business know this.
      But, most of our democracies are also oligarkies to. Basicly you can buy politicians legaly, to subsidise your business to get more money that you bribed the politicians with in the first place.

  • @agett12
    @agett12 2 роки тому +2

    I live in North Carolina and now every 5 to 10 cars in the area seem to be Tesla's. Other makes and models are starting to show up like the Ford F-150 Lightning, Ford Mustang MachE, Chevy Bolts Mercedes and BMW electric models. It seems every other month you're getting new fast charging stations as well and that was before the federal legislation that's gave us more money to install them. One out of every five of the largest gas station chain in the Raleigh area now has fast charging stations they're also showing up at Major box stores like Walmart and Target. They're several free fast charging stations in the area as well making the cost of fueling up basically zero.

  • @alinciocan5239
    @alinciocan5239 2 роки тому +10

    I actually see a lot of Dacia Spring (cheapest EV in Romania - it costs around €20k, but with goverment bonus you get it at half the price at only €10k 😁).
    Therefor I am seeing more and more EVs in Romania's big cities 😄

  • @Fs0n1ine
    @Fs0n1ine 2 роки тому +2

    Have I missed something? The video mentions that we are lacking charging standard as one of the challenges. But that is the one issue that we seem to have sorted out for now...

  • @XenoRaptor-98765
    @XenoRaptor-98765 2 роки тому +19

    Centuries from people will be wondering why it took so long to create space travel.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL 2 роки тому +6

      Well, space travel is tied to ICBMs, so it could’ve only happened after WWII. Unless we developed another method to launch people.

    • @baka9067
      @baka9067 2 роки тому +2

      @sourav jaiswal we need to bring back USSR 🌚

    • @marianasalles242
      @marianasalles242 2 роки тому

      Destroying our planet and thinking to conquer the space🙄. Humans are a desgrace 👎🏻

    • @uhohhotdog
      @uhohhotdog 2 роки тому

      @sourav jaiswal Batman is the bad guy

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL 2 роки тому

      @sourav jaiswal There was also the whole pivot to the ISS and space shuttle program that NASA started to do in the '80s.

  • @moony2703
    @moony2703 2 роки тому +3

    Another consideration for countries where cars are expensive is electric bikes, in at least one country there is more bike battery swapping stations than petrol stations.

  • @dekev7503
    @dekev7503 2 роки тому +1

    Norway is a very small country ( population wise) with vast amounts of clean renewable energy, ( from hydro energy to get energy). They also have vast oil reserves that can fund outrageously generous subsidy programs.

  • @jan-peterschuring88
    @jan-peterschuring88 2 роки тому +3

    I live in the Philippines and there are essentially no EV cars being sold nor is there any infrastructure. There are however increasing E-Bikes around and they are relatively cheap….so there is hope that even here the EV future will eventually arrive.

    • @PlanetZeroVideos
      @PlanetZeroVideos 2 роки тому

      In terms of single-rider efficiency, E-bikes are way better than EV cars. The power required to operate them is so much less and they're way more versatile in cramped urban settings.

  • @LaowaiDaveJCP
    @LaowaiDaveJCP 2 роки тому +3

    here in Shanghai, Streets are full of EVs of all sizes mini EVs to very common Tesla, Xpeng to Large luxury EVs like Nio, Li auto, Hongqi! it's fascinating how Europe is so behind (except Norway)

    • @alanlight7740
      @alanlight7740 2 роки тому +1

      It shouldn't be terribly surprising that China led the way with EV adoption. Aside from the greater need due to greater air pollution, EVs have had higher hurdles to be viable in Europe - both because driving distances are greater and the EVs have to be better than the cars that Europeans already have. By contrast, most people in China still do not have automobiles so even a car with only 200 km range and low safety standards is still a huge improvement over walking, a bicycle, or a motorcycle.
      The U.S. has much greater driving distances than Europe, so it is naturally going to be one of the later developed nations to switch to EVs as the EVs have to be much higher quality to be viable.

    • @ululukululu450
      @ululukululu450 2 роки тому +3

      @@alanlight7740 China has two advantages.
      1. Cheap high speed railway for any long distance travel elimating the need for very high range EVs like in the USA.
      2. Charging infrastructure. No matter what EV you have Chinese EV companies by law have to share their charging station with other EVs. The way it's done in USA is so so stupid. Can only charge Tesla in Tesla supercharger area. The Fcuk. Shouldnt every EV be allowed/made possible to charge in that area since the infrastructure has already been created?

    • @spider6660
      @spider6660 Рік тому

      @@alanlight7740 Please stop acting like being naive dude. Chinese have the best quality roads and bridges and the largest car market in the world. Even American Ford and GM sell more cars in China than their home country.

    • @alanlight7740
      @alanlight7740 Рік тому

      @@spider6660 - LOL - China has the largest car market in the world due to its huge population, yes - and no doubt China has improved a great deal in recent years, but no, China is still lagging when it comes to quality issues - and most of what it has accomplished in recent years is thanks to the efforts of western and Japanese companies operating in China.

  • @Nicholas-f5
    @Nicholas-f5 2 роки тому +7

    Have had an electric car nearly a decade now, it's fully paid for itself in fuel savings.
    We simply plug in at home overnight for a nearly free and full tank in the morning 🌄

    • @jakedank2746
      @jakedank2746 2 роки тому

      Ev car buyers are mind children,
      Mind children are easily led - and easily misled.

    • @PlanetZeroVideos
      @PlanetZeroVideos 2 роки тому +1

      My old neighbors used to have two EVs with solar panels on their roof. Not only did they not pay for gas, but charging their cars was practically free. The financial incentive is insane

    • @elijah420stuffs2
      @elijah420stuffs2 Рік тому +1

      @@PlanetZeroVideos also way less maintenance costs! In the future I plan also to buy an electric vehicle

    • @PlanetZeroVideos
      @PlanetZeroVideos Рік тому

      @@elijah420stuffs2 Yup, less air and noise pollution, less maintenance costs, cheaper fuel, and becoming cheaper and cheaper. Not to mention Tesla engines are outperforming nearly every combustion engine on the commercial market.

    • @admrsh
      @admrsh Рік тому

      @@elijah420stuffs2 It won’t be cheap when you need to change the battery

  • @martinandreaskruse4446
    @martinandreaskruse4446 2 роки тому +4

    Around 1/3 sold car is electric in Faroe Islands 😊

  • @karangala1187
    @karangala1187 2 роки тому +3

    In India, electric 2 wheelers have been doing much better than cars as the majority of the market can easily afford a 2 wheeler than a 4 wheeler. Do look into the data, I'm not sure how big a difference it'll be. Cheers

  • @Emilari-YT
    @Emilari-YT 2 роки тому +3

    In Canada, the change to fully electric cars is slow because it doesn't make sense. Canada experiences both extreme cold and heat, which makes the batteries in electric cars non-functional for part of the year. The range on an electric vehicle is still smaller than gas which also causes problems for people that don't live in major cities or need to travel long distances a lot; many parts of the country are very remote. Hybrid (electric and gas engine) cars are becoming popular, but a breakthrough in hydrogen fueled cars or battery technology is needed if we want to eliminate gas powered vehicles here.

  • @shaileshkris
    @shaileshkris 2 роки тому +6

    The shift to EVs is pretty slow here in India. Keeping aside those who appreciate the promises of new technology, there is massive mental inertia among the general masses who get easily manipulated by digital content that appeals to their cognitive biases. The govt.s EV policies and actions dont seem to be designed to help push against this regressive momentum as it prepares to head back again to the ‘golden age’ of coal dependency. Not to mention, our near totalitarian regime and its crony-capitalistic economic policies have left the masses too poor to purchase essentials, and too timid to ask for good things like progress.

    • @Nicholas-f5
      @Nicholas-f5 2 роки тому +1

      Lots of Indian pollution and corruption, sadly.

  • @albertogarza6077
    @albertogarza6077 2 роки тому +3

    In in Monterrey México It's more common to see electrified cars only at neighborhoods were people with greater incomes live.

    • @sableminer8133
      @sableminer8133 2 роки тому

      True, even here in the States. But even Chevy introduced the all new $30K Equinox that has long range, good looks, and will prob spur other lower cost and desirable competition.
      Oil companies should be shitting themselves at this point cuz all the automakers are going electric. Even Ferrari introduced a new electric SUV this week!

    • @alanlight7740
      @alanlight7740 2 роки тому +1

      The same was true of gas powered cars circa 1900. Only the wealthy could afford them. Going back further, only wealthy people had horses.
      But that changed rather quickly, and as continued development and economies of scale take hold, the cost of electric cars is likely to be similar to gas powered cars within five years, and could be significantly lower (adjusted for inflation) in another ten to twenty years.

  • @saya_miguel_akunlama3008
    @saya_miguel_akunlama3008 2 роки тому +2

    Those petrol companies should start making chargeables and batteries if this will be the future.

    • @kagin1235
      @kagin1235 Рік тому

      I think shell is already making a move rn in putting up charging stations and also might probably gonna do those

  • @rob_101
    @rob_101 2 роки тому +5

    Two things that concern me:
    - In some places we are charging electric vehicles from the electricity generated from fossil fuel.
    - Lithium is a very scarce resource. What do we do if we run out of that?

    • @da7me22
      @da7me22 2 роки тому +4

      Generally, electric cars are more efficient in motion. Even if the source of electricity comes from fossil fuels, it will burn less. Plus the costs of solar panels have decreased by 90% between 2010 and 2020. It is only a matter of time it gets as efficient fossil fuels.
      Lithium is extremely abundant. Way less scarce than fossil fuels. However miners need to increase their production. Which will happens since the demand for lithium is crazy atm.

    • @Nicholas-f5
      @Nicholas-f5 2 роки тому +2

      Gasoline is far more toxic and takes many kws per gallon to refine.

  • @ion1969
    @ion1969 2 роки тому +1

    Love the graphic illustration.❤😊

  • @Fenthule
    @Fenthule 2 роки тому +1

    I feel we need to work towards things like a Veemo or similar pedal driven but battery assisted small frame "vehicles" rather than full scale cars. They can go decently fast, they're stable, have storage, hell some bougie versions can have air condition and stuff lol But for the life of me I'll never understand why we decided driving around in massive 2000lb chunks of steel was a good idea. It's a bad use of raw resources, it causes hazards due to the weight and high speeds, and the pollution up til recently has been really bad. Honestly instead of full size vehicles, we could scale down and have techno-flintstones style vehicles. Battery would help so you don't break a sweat, just a constant steady pedal to keep the battery up basically.

    • @traveller23e
      @traveller23e 2 роки тому

      Yeah, honestly you don't even need the battery assist for most purposes. Just go with a well-geared bicycle structure, and if these manufactures ever get around to figuring out how to build them to a decent durability it'll last forever. I just wish we could lower the speed limits to the point they could be a major part of the traffic outside of cities as well as in.

  • @spacegreycoralred
    @spacegreycoralred 2 роки тому

    Charging infrastructure and reliability is a major issue. I live in southern Spain and the network is limited, and the percentage of stations that work is about 30%

  • @kirkreyes3368
    @kirkreyes3368 2 роки тому +3

    I live in Florida, USA. EVs are beginning to make a showing, even in spite of the many gas zombies that are still around. I believe that the biggest impediment by far in the proliferation of EVs in the United States is big oil and the politicians they buy to keep the status quo.

    • @jakedank2746
      @jakedank2746 2 роки тому

      Ev car buyers are mind children,
      Mind children are easily led - and easily misled.

    • @kirkreyes3368
      @kirkreyes3368 2 роки тому

      @@jakedank2746so you're saying that it is better to continue to adversely change the environment than be proactive and make some kind of effort to mitigate the effects of our own deleterious activity.

  • @jn8559
    @jn8559 2 роки тому +3

    Reliability is a concern. My 1983 Toyota still runs well. Will the battery lasts as long?

    • @daydreamer8373
      @daydreamer8373 2 роки тому +5

      You needn't worry, new battery tech like the 4680 cell is supposed to be good for over 1 million miles. this is not the only battery tech making these sort of claims, and although not widespread, it shows the potential for future battery tech.

    • @coltdevine994
      @coltdevine994 2 роки тому +2

      Battery will not last as long as any gasoline engine.

    • @thespalek1
      @thespalek1 2 роки тому +1

      @@daydreamer8373 future battery tech pops up every other week. Yet nobody made it real yet. I've driven bEVs few years old, which couldn't do over 50 miles in real life...

    • @daydreamer8373
      @daydreamer8373 2 роки тому +2

      @@thespalek1 I have driven my EV for the last 5 years and it still has the same range as when we bought it. Tesla's 4680 cell is already in production, and slowly being ramped. There are many other battery technologies like LFP showing real potential. Basically batteries are not an issue people imagine it to be.

    • @daydreamer8373
      @daydreamer8373 2 роки тому +3

      @@coltdevine994 Correct, battery tech will last longer.

  • @mylesrid
    @mylesrid 2 роки тому +3

    I live in Melbourne, Australia and see a number of Teslas every day. There is an EV changing point next to where I park my bike for uni and there is almost always a different car plugged in. I’m slowly beginning to see other brands but as we don’t have any good policies or incentives in place to promote rapid growth; the industry sends them to other countries that do have the policies as these EV’s are required there

    • @Battleneter
      @Battleneter 2 роки тому

      80% of Australian electricity is generated from Coal, most EV's on the road may make the owners "feel better" but its doing jack sheep to help global warming, and they probably sold perfectly decent cars to buy those EV's, so you can add on the massive carbon cost of manufacturing those EV's, absolute Elon Musk brain washed Muppets.

  • @Saalis87
    @Saalis87 5 місяців тому

    It is only 3% of cars sold in the Czech Republic. The pricing and the grid are a problem. We are not a large state but people still worry they might not get where they want with a battery-powered car.

  • @abytebit
    @abytebit 2 роки тому +1

    A typical passenger vehicle emits about 4.6 metric tons of carbon dioxide per year.
    The Tesla Model 3 holds an 80 kWh lithium-ion battery. CO2 emissions for manufacturing that battery would range between 2400 kg (almost two and a half metric tons) and 16,000 kg (16 metric tons).

  • @legostud
    @legostud 2 роки тому +1

    Don't forget about the Nickel Iron Edison Battery back in the early days that was good for 40years. These were made for Ford and you can still find functional ones today.

    • @paranoah1925
      @paranoah1925 2 роки тому

      Can you share some details?

    • @legostud
      @legostud 2 роки тому

      @@paranoah1925 - “Building on the work of the Swedish inventor Ernst Waldemar Jungner, who first patented a nickel-iron battery in 1899, Edison sought to refine the battery for use in automobiles.
      Edison claimed the nickel-iron battery was incredibly resilient, and could be charged twice as fast as lead-acid batteries. He even had a deal in place with Ford Motors to produce this purportedly more efficient electric vehicle.”

  • @johndoyle4723
    @johndoyle4723 2 роки тому +1

    I went PHEV 7 years ago, and fully EV 3 years ago, no going back for me, they are just so much better to drive than ICE.
    But they are still too expensive here in UK, public chargers are poor and often faulty, but they are now rapidly improving.
    I think we have now reached the tipping point in favour of EVs. In future years ICE owners will be the ones with range anxiety, searching for petrol stations.

  • @ShonnMorris
    @ShonnMorris 2 роки тому +1

    Here in California, EVs, mainly Teslas are increasing rapidly. In San Diego where I am Tesla Model 3s are almost as common as Honda Civics or Toyota Corollas.

  • @stianthomassen6693
    @stianthomassen6693 2 роки тому

    Feedback: I was curious why battery technology was at an almost standstill for almost century. Why was that?

  • @SweBeach2023
    @SweBeach2023 2 роки тому +1

    We need to realize few countries produce and consume even a fraction of the electricity used by Norway. We're talking orders of magnitude of difference between the largest and smallest consumers of electricity in the world. To give everyone a 3 phase 16A connection is such a huge undertaking it's mindboggling.

    • @steven4315
      @steven4315 2 роки тому +1

      EVs do not require 3 phase.

  • @ivobrick7401
    @ivobrick7401 2 роки тому +2

    Slovakia. Not many EV's here, they are expensive and now they are even way more expensive, Tesla, VW you name it.
    But Chineese EV's creeping in.. Nio, Xpeng, Dongfeng. More affordable, they don't pull out and leave most expensive models like Vw does.

  • @rogiervantilburg3440
    @rogiervantilburg3440 2 роки тому +2

    Great video!!

  • @rchatte100
    @rchatte100 2 роки тому +2

    You dont mention that Norway can only afford huge EV subsidies due to it's massive oil & gas sales.

    • @ululukululu450
      @ululukululu450 2 роки тому +2

      Exactly.. evs are nowhere near affordable to 95% of the people in the world.
      I was looking to buy a car recently and the cheapest car Toyota Prius hybrid was 1. Mostly unavailable, and 2. Dealerships were charging $5000 extra because of the EV/hybrid car shortage.
      No way was I going to pay $5000 extra on the cheapest barebone hybrid car.

  • @PlanetZeroVideos
    @PlanetZeroVideos 2 роки тому

    I live in San Diego and there has been an explosion of EVs recently. Charging stations have been installed down the street from me and the electric company is offering deals for off-peak charging discounts. It's a good intermediate to cut emissions today, but there needs to be a battery revolution away from lithium, followed by a transportation revolution away from private vehicle dependence.

  • @raffiboi22
    @raffiboi22 2 роки тому +1

    I traded in my Lexus RX 350 for tesla model 3P! I have free tesla charger at work and rarely have to pay for charging! I just wish it had air suspension and backup auto brake detection! I do miss how smooth the Lexus was but other than that it’s perfect

  • @debbiehenri345
    @debbiehenri345 2 роки тому +1

    I've seen more electric charging points in the nearest town to me - but never have I seen anyone using them.
    Personally, as someone on a really small budget, I'm going to have to wait until I can get my hands on a second-hand EV for about £1k or less (highly unlikely).
    However, the only reason I can run a petrol car now is because my husband is a mechanic and can do everything for the car we own. I suspect he won't be able to maintain an EV, since it's likely to be a lot of computerised rubbish inside - and garages charge what they like when it comes to 'programming' these newer cars to 'accept' newly fitted parts and mess about with numerous sensors.
    So I fully expect my government to eventually force us off the road with future laws. A pity they're not so quick to construct laws that prevent local councils from cutting back on public transport services - which is what finally forced me to learn to drive in the first place.

    • @waynecartwright7276
      @waynecartwright7276 2 роки тому

      It has the same brakes and suspension , but using regen the brakes last longer. I do my own maintenance and my 8yr old nissan Leaf has only needed tyres, wiper blades ,screen wash in the 6yrs ive owned it and a bottom suspension arm for the 1 mot it failed. In my experience of combustion cars reliability has been a tad different. Just because oil , filters , exhausts , clutches , cam belts , plugs , fuel filters , clutch cables etc are easy to change not having them at all is better.

  • @heldinugrahasuherman7438
    @heldinugrahasuherman7438 2 роки тому +1

    Indonesia, city Bandung still find 1 or 3 car EV on road, very far from a lot, because the price is expensive only people can afford a little. location for battrey recharge at home. in public places are rare too. probably still have to wait 20-50 years in the future.

  • @chrislloyd261
    @chrislloyd261 2 роки тому

    In waves it does I remember halogen came out in an LED came out a year later

  • @Abdul_wahab_khan
    @Abdul_wahab_khan 2 роки тому +1

    I think when we adopt the ev the problem occurs when the demand of gasoline will dropped the price of gasoline will also be drop so their should be very difficult for EV to completely kill gasoline engines in comparison of power and price ratio so their must be equlibirium in market untill all the electricity we generates must be completely transfer on renewable and their must be any breakthrough of new battery technology.

  • @ukracing5332
    @ukracing5332 2 роки тому +1

    Thx bro.... Iam from the southern coastal reagion of India. Befor the pendamic era electrical cars wer very lesss will find one in a 50 cars in the traffic... But in 2022 its increased significantly in numbers charging station availability also started in downtowns and major cities, also state electricity board of gov: started their own chaging station but still need to imrpove the number of charging points with respect to the km range of an electric car....

  • @DougGrinbergs
    @DougGrinbergs Рік тому

    6:43 S-curve adoption phases: emergence, diffusion, culmination

  • @juansebastianromero6357
    @juansebastianromero6357 2 роки тому

    Hello from Colombia !

  • @MarkDanielLouwe
    @MarkDanielLouwe 2 роки тому

    charging stations mostly non existent: cebu, ph

  • @francoismalan16
    @francoismalan16 2 роки тому

    In South Africa sadly not. Electric Vehicles are taxed at 42% whereas ICE vehicles are only taxed at 18% and sometimes even subsidized. The government also collects a lot of taxes through fuel sales and the country doesn't produce enough electricity even for businesses and households, nevermind cars. There has also been frequent power outages over the last 15 years that is getting worse. Add to that the ruling party has vested interests in the oil and gas industry and you understand why South Africa's government tries to block the adoption of electric vehicles and renewable energy - despite public and global pressure.

  • @jacksonbangs6603
    @jacksonbangs6603 3 місяці тому

    Here in Southern Oregon I am seeing an increase in both electric vehicle adoption and electric vehicle charging infrastructure.

  • @billhollis4781
    @billhollis4781 2 роки тому

    BEV’s are coming, but surprised you said nothing about Tesla.

  • @rare_wubbox360
    @rare_wubbox360 2 роки тому

    Great stuff, but Why are you drawing a lineær adoption curve for bevs??
    That not how a technology adoption curve looks/ will continue
    👍🇳🇴

  • @JohnAdams-dj1xi
    @JohnAdams-dj1xi Рік тому +1

    very nice video

  • @Amuzic_Earth
    @Amuzic_Earth 2 роки тому

    When you said India has less than 50k EVs on road...that's wrong on few levels. 1. There are millions of electric 3ws, few hundred thousand electric 2ws in addition to 60000+ electric 4ws. 2. 90% of those 60000+ electric cars were sold in last 1 year or so and the sales have multiplied 3-4 times across all segments in just 1 year. So, the stats would be drastically different in next few years.

  • @tefinnegan5239
    @tefinnegan5239 Рік тому +1

    Conveniently omitted is that an electric car has to be driven 60,000 miles before it breaks even on the amount of pollution caused in creating it.

  • @miskomarkovic3446
    @miskomarkovic3446 2 роки тому

    Thank you. Keep on

  • @birdpoldach7608
    @birdpoldach7608 2 роки тому +5

    I live in Thailnad, the price of electric car is quite same as combustion. however, most of them still come from china. So reliaable really play importance role here. Also infrastructure doesnot run in the same pace.

  • @kauevampiro7186
    @kauevampiro7186 2 роки тому

    Were i live had the “Gurgel” one of the brands that tried to apply the electric cars to the market in the 70’s, in a cheap way. Today’s we didn’t see almost any electric car or charge stations in Brazilians street’s

  • @timsimulations654
    @timsimulations654 2 роки тому +1

    Well, here in South Africa, we have 500MW of electricity to be shed in order to save the grid. On top of that, the unemployment rate is climbing at a steady rate, where 10 years ago, it was 35%, now it is almost 50%! So, no. In South Africa, there is more charging stations, than electric vehicles in the country. So, all in all, electric vehicles will take longer than the rest of the western word to adopt electric vehicles.
    As a South African, I love the people living in the country, but things has to change in parliament in order for the people to benefit from electric vehicles.

    • @Nicholas-f5
      @Nicholas-f5 2 роки тому

      Corruption and lack of education, mostly

    • @timsimulations654
      @timsimulations654 2 роки тому

      @@Nicholas-f5 I will say corruption, but lack of education is a bit farfetched. The problem in South Africa, is the school system isn't employing teachers who know the field they need to teach in. You can have a degree in teaching, but if you have little understanding of the subject you are teaching, the kids are on a "collision course with the iceberg."

  • @-opus
    @-opus 2 роки тому +1

    Australia is incredibly backwards in this respect, EVs are expensive and charging infrastructure is rare. One Australian state even charges a per km levy on EV drivers

  • @MH_Bikes
    @MH_Bikes Рік тому

    In the mid 1920's the north american automotive market was split 50/50 between electric and gas.

  • @d.v.kchaitanya1565
    @d.v.kchaitanya1565 2 роки тому +1

    I think India needs to invest more in its railways than investing in charging infrastructure. Indian railways transport over 23 million passengers daily. Most of this existing infrastructure is electric. Railways in India are greener, safer, and much more affordable.

  • @saiprayastha7141
    @saiprayastha7141 2 роки тому +3

    Indian govt is giving subsidies to people but still it is on expensive side... twice the cost of an averge ICE car

  • @skyworks1621
    @skyworks1621 2 роки тому

    Friday is the day I pick my Tesla model 3 LG, my first EV.

  • @thecrionic
    @thecrionic 2 роки тому +1

    I mean.. In eastern eastern europe (the balkans etc.) the majority of cars driven and bought every year, are second hand cars - like 80% or such. Majority of people can't afford new ones, much less electric alternatives. The infrastructure is not very good, to put it mildly, and public transport is at best passable, so alot of people rely on their old vehicles or buy used ones, imported from western europe to save on cost. In third world countries they have it much worse.
    The point is - when westerners decide to sell their EV's after 5 to 10 years of exploitation, the battery on those will more than likely been shot dead and in need of a change, which is not a very cheap endeavour. Anyone buying such a vehicle should be ready to splurge another few thousand $ for a replacement and this is simply impossible for average people in those regions. Furthermore, this will also have a negative effect on sales of perfectly usable used cars in the western countries, driving up sales of new cars, because nobody would want to bother when they can get the new model for a few thousand more. Basically a win for manufacturers, a loss for consumers. As always.
    All in all, i'm all for eco-friendly but in my opinion, this is not the time and this is not the way, we need better, greener and more reliable batteries. Current technology is not ecological at all...

  • @meloccom
    @meloccom 2 роки тому

    Things are changing quickly now in Australia. In a federal election in 2019 the Conservative party argued against EV subsidies and won power. At the next election in 2022, the 2019 statements were successfully used by the opposition and a number of independent candidates to push the conservatives out of power. At the same time EV sales quadrupled in a year from 1% to 4% of new car sales.

  • @arnekvinge6073
    @arnekvinge6073 2 роки тому

    Norway: EV is not cheap but the fossil cars have a lot of taxes on the sale price: CO2 emission kg/km , power and weight decide the one of sale tax. The EV had in the beginning free parking, free toll roads, free ferry's and can still drive in buss lanes. Now EV pay half in toll roads, parking, ferry's. I drive a lot in Bergen where the EV density is the highest. I commute 50 k as an plumber and see more EV closer to city center. So from 7.30 to 8.30 there is maybe a small EV majority.

  • @saurabhkatarey6818
    @saurabhkatarey6818 Рік тому +1

    Companies could have increased energy density of batteries if they really wanted but oil giants never wanted to loose their monopoly. Lot's of innovators voice were silenced during oil majors heydays. People were made to believe that there's no alternative to IC ENGINES. But electrical revolution is inevitable this time & EVs are gaining popularity in my home town. Curiosity among
    customers for higher energy density storage is just shooting up higher.

  • @frankcoffey
    @frankcoffey 2 роки тому +1

    We are going to see an explosion of innovation in all areas of EV and new energy. Batteries, electric motors, control equipment, charging, solar, everything. It's going to be a wild ride, there will be some science fiction come to life moments.

  • @Rayji10
    @Rayji10 2 роки тому

    I'm a bit skeptical over the electric cars, because they also create a lot of new problems to be solved in the process of mitigating the climate change issue, ex: dumping old batteries.
    The first step we should take is "Greening our habits", which means less consumption, smarter cities and an easy access to services in general. It sounds a utopic, but it's possible do be done.

  • @dollartracker
    @dollartracker 2 роки тому +1

    India: electric cars are rare as a unicorn

  • @goodthings5772
    @goodthings5772 2 роки тому +1

    It’s funny you mentioned Elon Musk barely once and you are talking about future of EV.

  • @241baka
    @241baka 2 роки тому +16

    Even better for the environment than EVs is not buying EVs.

    • @Richard482
      @Richard482 2 роки тому +1

      True, but I think cars will always be here.

    • @coltdevine994
      @coltdevine994 2 роки тому +3

      Makes almost double the pollution to make a ev vs a regular car

    • @davestagner
      @davestagner 2 роки тому +8

      @@coltdevine994 But the lifetime carbon footprint of EVs is FAR smaller. It’s not just the manufacturing footprint, it’s the operation footprint.

    • @coltdevine994
      @coltdevine994 2 роки тому

      @@davestagner depending on how the ev gets it's power. You'll still have to account for all the coal that is burned for most grids. Along with transportation emissions of all the resources. I do agree that some areas will have a lower lifetime but I don't think all will.

    • @thespalek1
      @thespalek1 2 роки тому

      @@davestagner ..unless you count in manufacturing of whole new battery pack every few years...

  • @horiaenache6333
    @horiaenache6333 2 роки тому

    Not only price is a problem but also the security of recicling batteries. Will not be Li-ion used batteries thrown from rich countries to Africa? Are you sure?

  • @DAna-yc7ym
    @DAna-yc7ym Рік тому

    I bet (and hope) the inflexion point of the S curve will be 3 to 5 years earlier than the one you showed (it was around 2030).

  • @BryceLovesTech
    @BryceLovesTech 2 роки тому +1

    My nine-year-old Tesla is still going strong and it is on it to original battery

    • @ululukululu450
      @ululukululu450 2 роки тому

      What's the mileage?
      What's the mostly insurance?

    • @BryceLovesTech
      @BryceLovesTech 2 роки тому

      @@ululukululu450 135,000 miles. The insurance only went up $50 per 6 months period versus my old Chevy.

  • @raffelJoshi
    @raffelJoshi 2 роки тому +3

    I know only one thing, if the EV's are going to increase on the roads, then a sustainable electrical generation systems must be implied rapidly. We need to avoid the increase of load on non-sustainable pollution causing energy sources like Thermal and Nuclear power stations . Also, an alternative for rubber wheels/ tyres needs to found?

    • @Galactico42
      @Galactico42 2 роки тому

      I only recently became aware of how much air quality is impacted by brake pads and rubber tires.

    • @gaydybwad1321
      @gaydybwad1321 2 роки тому

      EV charges at night while you sleep and grid has excess power. Don't worry so!

  • @DBADruid
    @DBADruid 2 роки тому +3

    Batteries won't solve climate change
    Mining lithium, chromium vanadium, rare elements is very energy intensive. What will happens to broken car batteries?
    It will also be needed a way to recycle dead car batteries too

  • @JensSchraeder
    @JensSchraeder Рік тому

    Norway and Finland are both a minute percent of the world population. The world’s electricity grid will have to be massively expanded which won’t happen due to cost.

    • @PyroShields
      @PyroShields 4 місяці тому

      What is your excuse for the population in China?

  • @pacoortiz6870
    @pacoortiz6870 2 роки тому

    I saw only a few hybrid cars on streets. Also some electric motocycles. Charging point no one yet. Ecuador

  • @buildgrowplay
    @buildgrowplay 2 роки тому

    It took so long because we all finally got dumb enough not to care about total efficiency.

  • @kenzyjordan5569
    @kenzyjordan5569 2 роки тому

    I’m from Virginia and I’ve been seeing a lot more electric cars and charging stations!

  • @BGP369
    @BGP369 2 роки тому

    Tokyo. I do not see EV charging stations very often, and zero construction along major routes. One would think governement stating only EV by 2030 would be intelligent enough to prepare the charging infra. Not so for Japan. They cant even build a link between east and west japan to link the 2 disparate power systems, which was a serious problem after the 3/11 tsunami. That is of course, inaction on purpose, because the governement is pushing for reopening nuclear power plants (while simultaneously taking no steps to shore up power suppoy, and claiming brownouts every single winter and summer like clockwork since 3/11).

    • @BGP369
      @BGP369 2 роки тому

      Oh.. and Subaru continues to refuse to make an electric Forester, so it looks like Volvo C40 or C60 Recharge for me, or perhaps Fiskar Ocean.... assuming its not vaporware ;)

  • @mijboogie
    @mijboogie 2 роки тому +4

    Won’t happen. In Europe the electric network is not there. Electric is to
    Expensive. More than gasoline. And let’s don’t start about the battery supply issue