harryadkins wrote:I agree. It's going to take a long time to allow electric vehicles to be competitive. Add up the cost of adding a home charging station plus the electricity used charges (if your neighborhood electric grid will handle the extra load.) On a recent visit to Georgia, my wife and I laughed to see a Tesla on the side of the interstate being charged by a portable diesel generator. On top of all this is the initial cost of an all-electric vehicle. I'm not excited...
Harry
I agree the infrastructure costs will be high. All who have all electric fleets will need enough to service most of their fleet vehicles, most fleets are not 100% in use at all times so they will be rotated on and off the charger,. Will these facilities need to upgrade the power service to accommodate? Some places such as shopping malls are already having issues with not enough chargers. Another issue is that there is no standard in place for charging cables and plugs. There are several in the US alone. North America: Type 1 and CCS
Tesla Model S and Model X owners in North America: Tesla connector and/or a CCS or ChaDeMo adaptor
Japanese manufactured vehicle owners: ChaDeMo