For various reasons my personal enthusiasm for EVs has been dampened recently, but I am broadly convinced that their time is almost upon us.Loki wrote: ↑Sun Dec 29, 2024 3:06 pm Sales of Chinese EVs have slumped in Europe after tariffs were applied to negate the Chinese Government subsidies. All Chinese EV companies but specifically byd, greely and saic.
Sales of Chinese EVs in the US are virtually nonexistent due to the tariffs applied to negate Chinese government subsidies.
There are continual issues being reported with quality, rust and mechanical issues.
There are issues with spare part stocks.
Byd is in the shit for building a factory in Brazil with imported slave labour.
Volkswagen is in the shit after being incompetent enough to allow real time public access to owner id and vehicle location for their entire fleet (lets ignore the question of why they need this data in the first place).
So 4 of the top 5 EV companies are dodgy as. And the 5th is Tesla.
Methinks EV domination may take a little longer than the pundits are claiming.
I've read a couple of articles addressing the rust and quality issues of Chinese cars, in which motoring journalists say they are the same as the issues the likes of Hyundai encountered early in their history; that the Chinese are faster at fixing the problems than previous up-and-comers; and that some of the Chinese makers are not as new as they seem, e.g. GWM has been in the Australian market since 2009. Another notable development was the reviewers won over by the MG4 a year ago. The "Chinese rustbucket" concept would appear to be out of date for the best of their EVs.
Legacy makers like VW are in financial trouble, including from sagging sales in China. I suspect they and others will press ahead with the installation of surveillance features in all cars, ICE or EV, to seek a new revenue stream from monetising data. I hate it and I have been researching ways to disable it if I am ever forced to own a car with such anti-features.
The timetable for EV domination is actually not that fast. For example: price parity for equivalent ICE and EVs by around 2027. Soon after that, EVs will be the cheaper option. By 2030, making new ICE cars will no longer be financially viable (but maybe some holdouts will still try). If you make December 31st the deadline, that's 6 years away... an eternity when technology is rolling out so fast.
It's not only about China. Hyundai is still behind the Chinese on price, but they are looking viable in EVs. I noticed a review of a Volvo EV this week noting it can be had for roughly the same price as the equivalent ICE model.
The other thing is that a lot of the EV negatives are amplified by culture war factors, misinformation, etc.. Climate deniers, MAGA types, Sky news clowns are quite passionate about it.