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Some people see the fuel crisis as a 'manufactured emergency' to stem the huge decline of interest in electric vehicles

But is it?

The pro-EV wonks are all claiming the current situation as a moral victory for the Twin Cults of Electric Jesus Christ and Net Zero. Yet the main push is not for EV's but to panic the general public into getting solar and batteries for their homes which most people cannot afford without incentives/rebates and credit finance to fund the purchases,

There's lots of anecdotal reporting that Telsa Cybertruck interest is tanking. Thankfully the wankpanzer has never (yet) been made in RHD so will never be sold in this country. Here in Australia, it's currently a 'war' between incumbent Felon Musk's Tesla (maker of high end EV's) and Chinese BYD (maker of cheap [relatively speaking] EV's) for the bulk of EV market share, with very minor presences of other car makers in the BEV space. EV's still make up less than 5 percent of all registered vehicles in Australia.

Liqud fuel for non-EV's is still insanely cheap currently hovering around A$3 a litre for diesel and a bit less for petrol. Before Trump's Folly it was only just under $2 a ltire, so the price hasn't risen much at all yet.

That said I haven't filled up my 4wd in a few weeks (since before Trump started his phony oil control war), and my car is out of rego so I can't drive it anyway. The 4wd takes 140 litres so will def be a cost impost to fill, but I don't have to plug it in to 'charge' every day to deal with range anxiety.

Both vehicles were filled up before Trump's pet project began. Car only needs it's annual rego inspection $50, then I have to pay for rego + tax and compulsory third party insurance (both about $450 each), so roughly $1000 to get it back on the road for another year. Wouldn't matter if I had an EV as EV's are generally heavier than their equivalent non-EV's so still incur the same rego and insurance costs.
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It costs us $50/month to power our EV where it used to cost $400/month for our gas powered van. If we had solar power too we would probably be making $100/month.
All the nonsense spewed above is meaningless in comparison.
Guess what, Trump and his murderous rampage cannot touch that.
zonavar68 · 56-60, M
@MisterBander How much does electricity cost you and what range do you get with a full charge? Here electricity is expensive. My 4wd goes for about 1300 km on a full fill of diesel. The EV economics don't add up for most people here and EV's are still basically a 'new fad'. I'm aware they've existed in present form in the USA for at least 10 years.

My vehicles are a 4.2 L n/a diesel and 2.1 L n/a petrol both made in 1992.
Midlifemale · 61-69, M
@MisterBander Are you comparing the same size vehicles ? Or a smaller EV to a large V8 powered van ?
@zonavar68 We get around 350km on an 80% charge which is the max charge recommended. We can get over 400km on a full charge, I think it was around 430. It costs $50 per month to power it.
I would love to hear how much it cost to fill up that diesel pickup per month.
The cool thing about EV is, there is no radiator, no exhaust, no transmission and it charges when slowing down so you save on brakes too. Super fast because the engine doesn't need to do anything to go faster, so passing someone is instant, starting from a light is instant, you just zip in front of all the gas cars and see ya later sucker.
There is no negative side to EV at all other than on longer trips it will take longer to charge up to 80%, but it sounds like that will be changing soon from the Japanese announcement recently. Apparently 9 minutes to charge up to 80% and range extension up to 1250km per fill.
I expect in the next 10 to 20 years we will see range going to 5000km and time to charge will be 2 seconds, but that might just be fantasy.
@Midlifemale Well, as you likely know, EV doesn't work well pulling big loads. The van we had would carry 7 people, but mostly it only went with 1. Maybe every 4 years when the inlaws visited would we fill it up. Our EV holds 5 and we have never filled it up fully yet.