Dave1971 said:coldel said:Infrastructure is the problem for sure though. Councils have other priorities over and above charging electric cars, and their remit is very limited in any case, it should be the private sector building the infrastructure not council or government - sure there should be subsidies and grants but energy companies should be stepping in and taking that slot of building out large fast charging stations etc. There is quite simply no realistic solution right now for charging at home if you dont have a driveway, we cant sit and wait around for that to change.
I disagree, our entire economy and way of life is completely dependent on the easy movement of people and goods. Now the government has mandated that the way we do that Must change. For that to happen a fundamental part of the infrastructure that we need has to change too. To largely leave it to the free market to deal with is totally unacceptable , the government made the (massive) decision they need to be heavily involved in the solution.
The infrastructure for moving is in place, the government have built a transit system for that purpose. The government have mandated that the fueling of vehicles must change, but the private sector provide the vehicles, they provide the fueling, they provide the maintenance of both, not the government. The private sector is already building infrastructure that we see on the roads in terms of charging stations, bays, and home solutions. The private sector build the actual EVs. This is where innovation and change comes from in response to government policy.
That said, the government will supply grants to the private sector to develop and innovate as they do with say the renewable energy sector as a response to the Paris agreement, billions of your tax pounds goes to energy companies to build wind farms and the like, but that is not the government building the energy infrastructure itself. EVs will be the same, they will aid with tax breaks and grants the private sector.