greenne
Well-known member
- First Name
- Nathan
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2021
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- Niskayuna, NY
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- 2022 Lightning (Ordered 6/19, delivered 10/28/22)
I think it goes further than that. If our intent is to get EVs on the road in significant numbers quickly for environmental purposes.. simply choosing an electric over an ICE at purchase time is not enough. Cars last longer and longer, people keep cars longer due to reliability and replacement cost. Even if we were to sell only EVs starting tomorrow, a significant number of the gas cars sold today(and those already on the road) would continue to be on the road 10, 15, perhaps 20yrs from now.Huge cost premium.
150 kWh battery pack = $15,000
Titan 5.4 engine = $2,000
Pricing Ford is matching the pricing of the F150 gas but that is not enough to get someone to switch from a gas to an EV with the range, charging, towing and other issues. A gas vehicle will be much more practical.
Right now, unless an early adopter looking to cut one's green house gas emissions, there needs to be an incentive.
"The Most Radical Thing About Ford's F-150 Lightning? The Price. After tax credits, the base model of the electric pickup will be cheaper than its gas-fueled sibling, removing what has been a big barrier for EV sales."
And they do mean "radical" as Ford is eating the cost difference which no other mfg is doing as one can see with $56k Hyundai's or VW's or Kia's or Chevy's, none are luxury car mfgs or status brands.
The Wyden plan has the incentive stopping when we reach 50% EV's which makes sense.
If we are serious about EV adoption we need to start convincing people to "trade up" and make the switch earlier than they would normally. We can do that by appealing to their environmental concerns, but it is likely more effective to appeal to their cost concerns. Its just a reality that nothing motivates people more than money.
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