Less Than Half Of Americans Are Interested In Purchasing An EV: Poll

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The Associated Press is out with a poll today showing that EV adoption might continue to be slow given that, at most, 4-in-10 Americans would at least be somewhat likely to buy an electric car. You know what people seem to be open to? Plug-in hybrids.

Is this disappointing news or good news? The AP piece accompanying the poll seems to indicate it’s bad news. I’m less convinced. If people are hesitant to buy an electric car it’s not entirely a surprise given how slow every company that’s not Tesla has been to roll out chargers.

And then, of course, there are stories of automakers like Fisker. A recent deep dive into the company seems to indicate things looked even worse from the inside than they did from the outside.

If there’s good news today it’s that Volvo has issued a passport for its car batteries using blockchain technology, which is a hell of a sentence.

How Many EV Buyers Were You Expecting?

Mustang Mach E Frunk
Filling every Mach-E frunk with Shrimp probably doesn’t help. Photo: Ford

The big polling news of the day isn’t over the presidential election, or the upcoming UK election, but over electric cars. It comes via the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago, which is a name so long you’d think it was a Land Rover product.

You can read the AP piece about it here, which gives off very ‘Biden is too far ahead of the population’ vibes:

The poll results, which echo an AP-NORC poll from last year, show that President Joe Biden’s election-year plan to dramatically raise EV sales is running into resistance from American drivers. Only 13% of U.S. adults say they or someone in their household owns or leases a gas-hybrid car, and just 9% own or lease an electric vehicle.

Caleb Jud of Cincinnati said he’s considering an EV, but may end up with a plug-in hybrid — if he goes electric. While Cincinnati winters aren’t extremely cold, “the thought of getting stuck in the driveway with an EV that won’t run is worrisome, and I know it wouldn’t be an issue with a plug-in hybrid,″ he said. Freezing temperatures can slow chemical reactions in EV batteries, depleting power and reducing driving range.

The article is very much the classic AP formula for covering anything (find a diverse mix of voices that don’t proportionally represent the AP‘s own polling data) and includes fun characters such as: Guy from Texas who doesn’t believe in global warming but has three EVs to save money and Florida lady who suddenly cares about the mining of precious metals and child labor but only in the context of electric cars for some reason that isn’t explored.

Let’s look at the actual numbers, though, because I think there’s some important context here. Right up top, 78% of respondents believe climate change is happening, which is the highest since the AP started doing this poll, with more than half of respondents saying climate change was caused entirely or mostly by human activities.

That’s pretty good considering the last eight years of a pandemic, cable news, and Facebook turned everyone’s minds into mush.

It’s the first year that this poll has asked if people have a gas-hybrid vehicle and it seems 13% of people do, followed by 6% who own a plug-in hybrid (slightly down from 2023, but within the sampling error), and 9% with an electric vehicle.

Here’s the big question, though:

AP poll results
Source: AP-NORC

Again, we’re in the margin of error here, with more people saying they’re extremely/very likely to purchase an EV compared to 2023, but slightly down for “somewhat likely.”

More interesting is the reason why people wouldn’t consider an EV, which is that 59% percent think cost is a major issue (they’re not wrong). Another 47% list range as a major concern, and 38% of people say they don’t know of any charging stations nearby.

Perhaps the most interesting question is about Chinese EVs. The AP asked the following question:

Suppose you were planning on purchasing an electric vehicle and you had the choice between buying a vehicle made in China and one made in the United States. The U.S. made vehicle costs $__ more than the Chinese-made vehicle, but they are otherwise similar in performance and appearance. Would you purchase the less expensive vehicle made in China or the more expensive vehicle made in the U.S.?

The biggest surprise is that 22% of respondents would buy a Chinese car if they saved even $500. The scale slides until you reach 37% of Americans saying they’d buy a Chinese car over an American one if they could save $5,000. Even with double the tariffs, a Chinese automaker might be able to sell a car that saves that much money, though I think the sweet spot is $1,000.

So what’s the takeaway here? If you’re the AP it seems to be that people aren’t embracing EVs in spite of all the rhetoric. I have the exact opposite take. People still feel roughly the same as they do about EVs in spite of all the bad news, the anti-EV rhetoric, and the lack of great EV choices. If cost is the biggest factor, as the AP suggests, then this is a problem that’s eventually solvable. (It’ll be interesting to see how well the Chevy Equinox EV does.)

Still, if 40% of people actually did buy an EV for their next vehicle that would be an enormous win for the industry which, at this point, probably can’t even make that many electric cars (at least ones that will qualify for an EV tax credit).

The Federal Government Has Committed Billions For Chargers And… Eight Stations Are Now Open

0x0 Supercharger 01
Source: Tesla

Federal, state, and local governments in the United States are bad about encouraging the building of things that are not planes or bombs and, even then, they’re not that great at planes either. Some look at this as a problem of government itself, even though most other modern countries seem to build infrastructure without as many issues.

The building of an electric charging network is one of those projects that goes to show just how complex this all is, with a total of eight chargers built out of hoped-for network of 500,000 by 2030 (encompassing both public and private chargers, currently there are 174,000 plugs online).

Some of this is the expected typical process of having to go through rounds of approvals, get power, clear regulations, et cetera. Wyoming has few EVs, and estimates show that the most popular charging station would probably charge fewer than six cars a day, so the state government isn’t in a hurry. Some reasons, according to this thorough report from Automotive News, are more unique:

Some state applications require bid bonds or letters of credit, said Sara Rafalson, executive vice president of policy and external affairs for EVgo. State departments of transportation mandate those requirements after experiences with infrastructure projects, such as bridges.

“It just doesn’t really translate to EV charging,” she said.

Other issues include delayed proposal timelines and a lack of coordination between the state and the power company, she said.

ChargePoint shares those concerns and has been wary of states that cap charging operators’ earning potential. Minnesota, Iowa, Kentucky and North Carolina say the annual return on investment cannot exceed 15 to 25 percent, depending on the state.

To make things even more fun, Tesla walking back its Supercharger program after being approved for government funds is probably going to cause some delays. If there’s a silver lining it’s that, as a subsidy, the cost offset of federal funds is likely to make sites that do get built profitable on a much faster timeline.

Fisker Reportedly Took Parts Off Henrik Fisker’s Car, Had Suppliers Fly Parts In Luggage

Fisker Ocean 1

The great Sean O’Kane over at TechCrunch put out a whopper of a story on what happened at Fisker, and it seems to underline the idea that Fisker was not a well-run business.

The road to Fisker’s ultimate ruin may start and end with its flawed Ocean SUV, which has been riddled with mechanical and software problems. But it was paved with hubris, power struggles, and the repeated failure to set up basic processes that are foundational for any automaker.

“The lack of processes and procedures was kind of mind-blowing,” Sean O’Grady, a former regional sales manager at Fisker, told TechCrunch. “The same excuse that I kept hearing all the time was, well, if you’ve never worked for a startup before, this is what it’s like, it’s chaotic.”

The article is full of cringe-worthy anecdotes, but the one that stuck out to me was that the company allegedly didn’t stockpile extra parts because, as Henrik Fisker’s wife/CFO/COO Geeta Gupta-Fisker reportedly put it, the build quality at Magna was “superior” so the Ocean was unlikely to run into many problems and need extra parts.

There were so few parts that Magna engineers allegedly flew parts to the U.S. in luggage and pinched parts from the production line, which was not sufficient:

So the company started cannibalizing cars that had been returned, or ones that the company had on hand for marketing purposes, according to multiple employees. This included the Ocean SUV that Henrik Fisker used. Employees removed his car’s steering wheel, some interior panels, and even his driver’s seat cushion for use in customer cars.

Employees also salvaged parts from the Ocean that former Chief Accounting Officer John Finnucan used, weeks before he left the company.

Matt DeBord, a guy who worked briefly with some of us at Jalopnik, is now the VP of Comms there and he said, on behalf of the company, that these claims are false.

Volvo Is Giving Its Batteries Passports

Volvo Ex90
Source: Volvo

Cars are complex and made of parts from all over the world. This has always been an issue and the sourcing of parts comes up for various reasons, often either logistical or political, on occasion. Now that governments are looking into battery sourcing before handing out incentives or tariffs, the sourcing of car parts has never been important.

How do you prove where a battery comes from? Volvo’s idea is a passport (though, a passport for stuff is usually called a carnet) for its batteries. The EX90 SUV, built in South Carolina, will be the first vehicle to get such a passport. The passport was developed by UK-based company Circulor.

Per Reuters:

Circulor’s system traces battery materials from the mine to individual cars, piggybacking on suppliers’ production systems to track materials throughout the supply chain and checking suppliers’ monthly energy bills – and how much of their energy comes from renewable sources in order to calculate a total carbon footprint.

That’s cool. I like this. Also, the passport will include data on the battery’s health.

What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD

It’s the second most important song called “Creep” from the ’90s, but it’s been in my mind since church this weekend when the gospel lesson was from the third chapter of the book of Mark. In this story, Jesus goes into a synagogue and sees a guy with a messed-up hand. The Pharisees wait to see if Jesus will heal the dude on the sabbath, which he does, and they get mad about it and tell on him. I’m a fan of this lesson, but I was immediately distracted by my wife, in her best Scott Weiland voice, leaning over and whispering in my ear “Take time with a wounded hand ‘Cause it likes to heal.” I stifled a laugh, but now the song has been stuck in my head for a few days.

The Big Question

Has your view of EVs changed in the last year?

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175 thoughts on “Less Than Half Of Americans Are Interested In Purchasing An EV: Poll

  1. Personally, I’m not considering one now or in the foreseeable future. I drive maybe 6k miles a year and a good chunk of those are trips to rural areas to visit family, where charging would be very inconvenient. My Sportwagen TDI averages 40+ on the highway and around 37mpg combined, and it does everything I need it to (plus I really, really enjoy driving a manual). I only have nine months of payments left on it and I’m excited to not have a car payment again. Hell, it’s a 2014 and only has 62k miles on it. It might get to join my 1972 Super Beetle as a “forever car.” Not that I’m opposed to having an EV one day, but right now, I have a practical, efficient car that’s exactly what I wanted (body style, engine, transmission, interior/exterior colors). So I’m going to enjoy that as long as I can.

    But my fiancee is open to an EV/PHEV for his next car. He commutes to work so he drives over twice the miles yearly that I do. However, his Mazda3 hasn’t left a 50 mile radius around the city in the three years he’s owned it, so a BEV would be no problem for him. We have a garage and installing a charger wouldn’t be an issue. Long trips are always handled by the Sportwagen due to superior fuel economy (and the security of a full size spare tire), so we wouldn’t have to deal with charging on a road trip if we didn’t want to. Still, that’s years down the road. He loves his Mazda and will likely put 150k+ miles on it before moving on.

  2. Personally, I’m not considering one now or in the foreseeable future. I drive maybe 6k miles a year and a good chunk of those are trips to rural areas to visit family, where charging would be very inconvenient. My Sportwagen TDI averages 40+ on the highway and around 37mpg combined, and it does everything I need it to (plus I really, really enjoy driving a manual). I only have nine months of payments left on it and I’m excited to not have a car payment again. Hell, it’s a 2014 and only has 62k miles on it. It might get to join my 1972 Super Beetle as a “forever car.” Not that I’m opposed to having an EV one day, but right now, I have a practical, efficient car that’s exactly what I wanted (body style, engine, transmission, interior/exterior colors). So I’m going to enjoy that as long as I can.

    But my fiancee is open to an EV/PHEV for his next car. He commutes to work so he drives over twice the miles yearly that I do. However, his Mazda3 hasn’t left a 50 mile radius around the city in the three years he’s owned it, so a BEV would be no problem for him. We have a garage and installing a charger wouldn’t be an issue. Long trips are always handled by the Sportwagen due to superior fuel economy (and the security of a full size spare tire), so we wouldn’t have to deal with charging on a road trip if we didn’t want to. Still, that’s years down the road. He loves his Mazda and will likely put 150k+ miles on it before moving on.

  3. Goddamnit my poor boys at GM doing the right thing a decade too early and cancelling the program before it takes off AGAIN. I really do think they could release the Gen 2 volt into a modernized body now and it would still be competitive.
    The range, and off battery fuel economy are still better than 99% of current offerings.

    Though one of the issues with the voltec platform is the weird T-shaped battery back. The center spine isnt too bad, it kind of simulates a transmission tunnel but the rear sort of relegates that shape to traditional sedans or hatchbacks. Couldn’t really build a flat floored CUV with that.

    1. Not sure why a Hatchback and CUV/SUV format would be any different. One’s just higher off the ground than the other. And the Volt was already a hatchback.

      1. The floor tends to be pretty flat in the rear of a CUV/SUV. The seats and luggage compartment in a Volt are raised to accommodate the battery pack. By quite a significant degree.

  4. Goddamnit my poor boys at GM doing the right thing a decade too early and cancelling the program before it takes off AGAIN. I really do think they could release the Gen 2 volt into a modernized body now and it would still be competitive.
    The range, and off battery fuel economy are still better than 99% of current offerings.

    Though one of the issues with the voltec platform is the weird T-shaped battery back. The center spine isnt too bad, it kind of simulates a transmission tunnel but the rear sort of relegates that shape to traditional sedans or hatchbacks. Couldn’t really build a flat floored CUV with that.

    1. Not sure why a Hatchback and CUV/SUV format would be any different. One’s just higher off the ground than the other. And the Volt was already a hatchback.

      1. The floor tends to be pretty flat in the rear of a CUV/SUV. The seats and luggage compartment in a Volt are raised to accommodate the battery pack. By quite a significant degree.

  5. For me, The RAM 1500 Ramcharger is exactly what I want and I hope to be in the market for it unless it ends up being either a gigantic piece of junk or it’s too expensive. Ford’s Powerboost is another one that is almost there but reliability and cost were issues to me ever buying it.

  6. For me, The RAM 1500 Ramcharger is exactly what I want and I hope to be in the market for it unless it ends up being either a gigantic piece of junk or it’s too expensive. Ford’s Powerboost is another one that is almost there but reliability and cost were issues to me ever buying it.

  7. Great song from Scott Weiland. While not the best example of a human being, the man could sing in so many styles and voices. Really impressive stuff. Even his solo album was enjoyable.

    Got a new Autopian tee yesterday – they are very soft and my son digs the design. “Dad, it’s a Lego car, so cool!”.

    My next car will be a hybrid. I live in North Carolina. Where I am, winter can get cold but we do not regularly experience snow.

    Fisker and his partner, based on the read and photos, yeah. Another insufferable “power duo”.

  8. Great song from Scott Weiland. While not the best example of a human being, the man could sing in so many styles and voices. Really impressive stuff. Even his solo album was enjoyable.

    Got a new Autopian tee yesterday – they are very soft and my son digs the design. “Dad, it’s a Lego car, so cool!”.

    My next car will be a hybrid. I live in North Carolina. Where I am, winter can get cold but we do not regularly experience snow.

    Fisker and his partner, based on the read and photos, yeah. Another insufferable “power duo”.

  9. EV – Yes.

    I was an early-ish adopter of the Chevy Volt (2012). I hated that car. It caused me to keep a 2nd car to have fun – the Volt did everything really too well for me .. so I just couldn’t get rid of it. Haul sod and mulch and gravel? Yep – trailer hitch, up to 2k pounds. Bike rack for adventures. Back seat bottoms removed gave me a flat load floor for the doggo, hauling tools to work on projects .. it fit 12′ trex boards for a patio project INSIDE(!) the car (hatch open). I did gig work hauling Lime scooters and then delivering for Amazon.

    12 years, 107000 absolutely trouble free miles, lifetime 161.7 avg mpg

    I’ve owned 40+ cars in my driving life of 40+ years. Keeping one car KILLS me (if only on the inside). So I really needed a change.

    This week I picked up a 2020 Bolt from the GM buyback. Loaded Premium, 5k miles one-owner Cali car, and most importantly – it actually got a new battery and comes with all of the warranties updated to match. Basically a sub-new yet 4yr old car that will handle daily for me as I downsize the fleet in my retirement (yay me).

    I got it for $16,200. So HELL YES, give me $16,200 and I’ll be buying nearly new, under warranty, reliable and nice EVs all day long….

  10. EV – Yes.

    I was an early-ish adopter of the Chevy Volt (2012). I hated that car. It caused me to keep a 2nd car to have fun – the Volt did everything really too well for me .. so I just couldn’t get rid of it. Haul sod and mulch and gravel? Yep – trailer hitch, up to 2k pounds. Bike rack for adventures. Back seat bottoms removed gave me a flat load floor for the doggo, hauling tools to work on projects .. it fit 12′ trex boards for a patio project INSIDE(!) the car (hatch open). I did gig work hauling Lime scooters and then delivering for Amazon.

    12 years, 107000 absolutely trouble free miles, lifetime 161.7 avg mpg

    I’ve owned 40+ cars in my driving life of 40+ years. Keeping one car KILLS me (if only on the inside). So I really needed a change.

    This week I picked up a 2020 Bolt from the GM buyback. Loaded Premium, 5k miles one-owner Cali car, and most importantly – it actually got a new battery and comes with all of the warranties updated to match. Basically a sub-new yet 4yr old car that will handle daily for me as I downsize the fleet in my retirement (yay me).

    I got it for $16,200. So HELL YES, give me $16,200 and I’ll be buying nearly new, under warranty, reliable and nice EVs all day long….

  11. I’m pretty much unchanged in my stance on BEVs. I will eventually get one for a DD but it won’t be for a while – 7-10 years, maybe.

    The main reason is my current DD is fine and I see no reason to drop big money on another car – buying new cars when I don’t actually need one is a terrible financial decision.

    To a lesser degree, I’m just not confident about the current tech and the long term durability and reparability. Between things like the Leaf’s poor design and the very high cost to repair a battery pack I’m going to happily sit on the sidelines for the time being and let things shake out with the aftermarket hopefully stepping in.

  12. I’m pretty much unchanged in my stance on BEVs. I will eventually get one for a DD but it won’t be for a while – 7-10 years, maybe.

    The main reason is my current DD is fine and I see no reason to drop big money on another car – buying new cars when I don’t actually need one is a terrible financial decision.

    To a lesser degree, I’m just not confident about the current tech and the long term durability and reparability. Between things like the Leaf’s poor design and the very high cost to repair a battery pack I’m going to happily sit on the sidelines for the time being and let things shake out with the aftermarket hopefully stepping in.

  13. And we all know polls are always 100% accurate and never skewed by the fact that people with the most extreme viewpoints are the ones most likely to respond. /s

    I’ve seriously shopped EVs in the past. My Prius was supposed to be a starter electrified vehicle that I would replace in a few years with a full EV. The more I think about it the less I think I will own a full EV in the next ten years or so. I know I’m repeating myself, but around here it’s actually better for the environment to drive a PHEV and get 100+ MPG than to drive a full EV, thanks to the makeup of our electrical grid. A PHEV will let me drive a lot of my miles on electric-only, but when I want to go longer distances I can stop at one of the ubiquitous gas stations already in existence that almost always work (and if they don’t there’s another one a block away) instead of hunting for a few-and-far-between EV charger that you could probably place prop bets in Vegas on whether it will work or not.

    Honestly, I consider BEVs much less of an inevitability than I used to. If we get to a point where PHEVs allow us to eliminate, as a hypothetical, 90% of our current gas usage for personal transportation, that might be enough. At that point there are much more important targets for greenification than cars, and chasing that last 10% is going to take 90% of the effort (as anyone who has ever worked on a large project knows). I’m not going so far as to say full BEVs will never happen – a battery tech breakthrough could happen tomorrow that completely changes things – but I’m less and less certain we should be chasing BEVs as the endgame in their current state.

    Converting 95% of the car fleet to PHEVs that eliminate 80% of tailpipe emissions would be a much bigger win than converting 50% of the fleet to full EVs (and I think that’s an optimistic number anytime soon) that completely eliminate tailpipe emissions. And the PHEV option is a much easier pill for society to swallow, so it’s more likely to actually happen.

  14. And we all know polls are always 100% accurate and never skewed by the fact that people with the most extreme viewpoints are the ones most likely to respond. /s

    I’ve seriously shopped EVs in the past. My Prius was supposed to be a starter electrified vehicle that I would replace in a few years with a full EV. The more I think about it the less I think I will own a full EV in the next ten years or so. I know I’m repeating myself, but around here it’s actually better for the environment to drive a PHEV and get 100+ MPG than to drive a full EV, thanks to the makeup of our electrical grid. A PHEV will let me drive a lot of my miles on electric-only, but when I want to go longer distances I can stop at one of the ubiquitous gas stations already in existence that almost always work (and if they don’t there’s another one a block away) instead of hunting for a few-and-far-between EV charger that you could probably place prop bets in Vegas on whether it will work or not.

    Honestly, I consider BEVs much less of an inevitability than I used to. If we get to a point where PHEVs allow us to eliminate, as a hypothetical, 90% of our current gas usage for personal transportation, that might be enough. At that point there are much more important targets for greenification than cars, and chasing that last 10% is going to take 90% of the effort (as anyone who has ever worked on a large project knows). I’m not going so far as to say full BEVs will never happen – a battery tech breakthrough could happen tomorrow that completely changes things – but I’m less and less certain we should be chasing BEVs as the endgame in their current state.

    Converting 95% of the car fleet to PHEVs that eliminate 80% of tailpipe emissions would be a much bigger win than converting 50% of the fleet to full EVs (and I think that’s an optimistic number anytime soon) that completely eliminate tailpipe emissions. And the PHEV option is a much easier pill for society to swallow, so it’s more likely to actually happen.

  15. The Big Question:
    Yes.
    I went from “My next vehicle is electric” to…
    Oh, I actually tow a LOT now, so let me put $100 down on the RamCharger, a PHEV Hybrid.

  16. The Big Question:
    Yes.
    I went from “My next vehicle is electric” to…
    Oh, I actually tow a LOT now, so let me put $100 down on the RamCharger, a PHEV Hybrid.

  17. Regarding the “big question” relating to that poll of people considering BEVs… when I look at the poll numbers, I look at it as good news.

    Why?

    You have 40% open to buying a BEVs for the 2024 poll. And that’s up from 2023 which was about 39%.

    Plus, the percentage of people open to BEVs is much much bigger than the current market share of BEVs… and the number of people open to BEVs has grown year over year.

    Thus, this is actually a good news story. It doesn’t matter that the vast majority want to buy BEVs right now since there wouldn’t be enough production capacity to satisfy demand like that anyway.

    What’s important is more and more people are coming around to the idea… and the percentage of people that want to buy BEVs now was completely unthinkable a decade ago and is probably giving old-school car guys like Bob Lutz as well as a lot of execs at Toyota, Honda, Mazda and others NOT heavily invested in BEV tech some sleepless nights.

    Henrik Fisker’s wife/CFO/COO Geeta Gupta-Fisker reportedly put it, the build quality at Magna was “superior” so the Ocean was unlikely to run into many problems and need extra parts.”

    Well that tells me that she wasn’t qualified to be a COO, that’s for sure.

    “Has your view of EVs changed in the last year?”

    Nope. BEVs are the future for automotive. It’s not a question of ‘if’, but ‘how fast’.

    And how fast also depends on battery cell production increases and the supply chain to support that.

    There is one minor change in my view… I went from “my next vehicle might be a BEV” to “my next vehicle will DEFINITELY be a BEV” due to the drop in used BEV prices.

  18. Regarding the “big question” relating to that poll of people considering BEVs… when I look at the poll numbers, I look at it as good news.

    Why?

    You have 40% open to buying a BEVs for the 2024 poll. And that’s up from 2023 which was about 39%.

    Plus, the percentage of people open to BEVs is much much bigger than the current market share of BEVs… and the number of people open to BEVs has grown year over year.

    Thus, this is actually a good news story. It doesn’t matter that the vast majority want to buy BEVs right now since there wouldn’t be enough production capacity to satisfy demand like that anyway.

    What’s important is more and more people are coming around to the idea… and the percentage of people that want to buy BEVs now was completely unthinkable a decade ago and is probably giving old-school car guys like Bob Lutz as well as a lot of execs at Toyota, Honda, Mazda and others NOT heavily invested in BEV tech some sleepless nights.

    Henrik Fisker’s wife/CFO/COO Geeta Gupta-Fisker reportedly put it, the build quality at Magna was “superior” so the Ocean was unlikely to run into many problems and need extra parts.”

    Well that tells me that she wasn’t qualified to be a COO, that’s for sure.

    “Has your view of EVs changed in the last year?”

    Nope. BEVs are the future for automotive. It’s not a question of ‘if’, but ‘how fast’.

    And how fast also depends on battery cell production increases and the supply chain to support that.

    There is one minor change in my view… I went from “my next vehicle might be a BEV” to “my next vehicle will DEFINITELY be a BEV” due to the drop in used BEV prices.

  19. There’s some goalpost shifting when you look at surveys like this since EV may or may not include plug-ins depending on what you want the survey result to mean.

    A PHEV for all intents and purposes is an electric car, so a “I won’t buy an EV because I’m going to buy a PHEV” is kind of a confused answer.

  20. There’s some goalpost shifting when you look at surveys like this since EV may or may not include plug-ins depending on what you want the survey result to mean.

    A PHEV for all intents and purposes is an electric car, so a “I won’t buy an EV because I’m going to buy a PHEV” is kind of a confused answer.

  21. My opinion was fairly solid a little over a year ago, but the 1,600 mile EV road trip we did mid-June last year cemented it. I’m all in on EVs and we became an all EV household in July 2023. I’ve only bought gas twice for yard equipment since then.

    I did it for total cost of ownership, reliability and simplicity. Anyone who has easy access to home or work charging should look at their vehicle use case and consider an EV when it’s time to replace a car. I had to work through my own FUD (fear, uncertainty and doubt) before buying a Model 3 in February 2023.

  22. My opinion was fairly solid a little over a year ago, but the 1,600 mile EV road trip we did mid-June last year cemented it. I’m all in on EVs and we became an all EV household in July 2023. I’ve only bought gas twice for yard equipment since then.

    I did it for total cost of ownership, reliability and simplicity. Anyone who has easy access to home or work charging should look at their vehicle use case and consider an EV when it’s time to replace a car. I had to work through my own FUD (fear, uncertainty and doubt) before buying a Model 3 in February 2023.

  23. I’m not buying an EV until I am forced to. I park outside. That means people walking by at night can unplug my car because they think it’s funny if my car is dead. I hope plug-in hybrids still exist by the time I need one.

    1. My car has the option of setting the alarm if somebody unplugs it when the doors are locked. Though kids might just find that funnier…

  24. I’m not buying an EV until I am forced to. I park outside. That means people walking by at night can unplug my car because they think it’s funny if my car is dead. I hope plug-in hybrids still exist by the time I need one.

    1. My car has the option of setting the alarm if somebody unplugs it when the doors are locked. Though kids might just find that funnier…

  25. My view hasn’t: If people want EV’s, they should be able to get them.
    I know I want one. I’m not into the whole “adventuring” and “vacationing” things 99% of the population are into. If I ever travel, anything over like 50 miles one way has been in the summer. But I don’t think I could really consider having an EV right now. The biggest hurdle? Public parking has no infrastructure. Neither does work.

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