This is an interesting thread, some comments to the various points;
Tesla - amazing how someone can start a car company, the amount of money involved is mind blowing and I know they are selling 60k cars in China each month. However, Tesla made a loss last year on selling cars (not sure if global or regional), about $200m if I remember correctly but made an overall profit of $400 by selling CO2 offset credits to other car companies. Does this really help the environment?
I would not buy an electric car although one would actually suit my wife's driving profile (frequency and range). Not because I don't like the whole EV thing, it's just the technology is moving on so fast it only makes sense to lease for 3 years then walk away. A UK company called YASA has developed a motor that for half the weight, half the size, can put out twice the power. It's so good Mercedes brought them and I assume will be in the Hybrid C63 that started this thread.
Finally, a cleverer person than me (top BMW eng actually) said an electric car only makes sense if all the energy needed to gather the materials and produce the car, plus the energy consumed during the life of the car and the energy required to recycle the end of life car comes from renewable energy! I think we are far from that currently and while a modern diesel or petrol does burn fossil fuels, in total lifetime vs an EV, it's pretty even for CO2 output currently.
Tesla - amazing how someone can start a car company, the amount of money involved is mind blowing and I know they are selling 60k cars in China each month. However, Tesla made a loss last year on selling cars (not sure if global or regional), about $200m if I remember correctly but made an overall profit of $400 by selling CO2 offset credits to other car companies. Does this really help the environment?
I would not buy an electric car although one would actually suit my wife's driving profile (frequency and range). Not because I don't like the whole EV thing, it's just the technology is moving on so fast it only makes sense to lease for 3 years then walk away. A UK company called YASA has developed a motor that for half the weight, half the size, can put out twice the power. It's so good Mercedes brought them and I assume will be in the Hybrid C63 that started this thread.
Finally, a cleverer person than me (top BMW eng actually) said an electric car only makes sense if all the energy needed to gather the materials and produce the car, plus the energy consumed during the life of the car and the energy required to recycle the end of life car comes from renewable energy! I think we are far from that currently and while a modern diesel or petrol does burn fossil fuels, in total lifetime vs an EV, it's pretty even for CO2 output currently.