A
Anonymous
Guest
The IFS, back in 2012 recommended a road pricing scheme to tax all vehicles regardless of power source. ANPR makes this easy(ish) to implement. Pay more to travel in peak times on congested routes and pay less to travel off peak in rural areas. The sooner EVs are forced to pay tax the better, the current offerings are far from green considering the components that go into making / disposing of the batteries and the power generation source required to charge them.
As soon as EVs have a range of 400 miles and can charge in 10 to 15 minutes (a company in Israel has developed a Solid State battery that can do this, so the tech exists, albeit too expensive right now) I will happily use one for commuting up and down the M40. I couldn't care what the power source is for that. Just the small matter of generating and distributing the power needed to charge all these cars overnight and during the day. How are motorists who live in flats, or have on road parking going to be catered for? Charging points replacing parking meters?
I read it takes around £12 / 85kWh to charge a Tesla that is about the same power that my house uses in a week, I'd charge twice a week for my commute, the grid would collapse under the demand if we're all doing that.
The infrastructure required to make this all viable by 2040 is huge.
As soon as EVs have a range of 400 miles and can charge in 10 to 15 minutes (a company in Israel has developed a Solid State battery that can do this, so the tech exists, albeit too expensive right now) I will happily use one for commuting up and down the M40. I couldn't care what the power source is for that. Just the small matter of generating and distributing the power needed to charge all these cars overnight and during the day. How are motorists who live in flats, or have on road parking going to be catered for? Charging points replacing parking meters?
I read it takes around £12 / 85kWh to charge a Tesla that is about the same power that my house uses in a week, I'd charge twice a week for my commute, the grid would collapse under the demand if we're all doing that.
The infrastructure required to make this all viable by 2040 is huge.
(As usual).