Rare poster but frequent reader.
I can’t really comment about the efficacy or true cost relativity of EV to ICE other than to say EV is at early stage of its product cycle and therefore not near critical mass where much bigger production/sales savings are manifested( even though battery costs are substantially lower).
As a long term Hybrid owner though there are a couple of misconceptions that keep occurring related to extra weight/ comparative ICE efficiency and most effective vehicle use.
We are currently on our sixth and seventh hybrids following a long line of mainly petrols but also a few diesels.
For quick comparison we have had five Toyota RAV4s:
1st Generation 5 door petrol manual 126 bhp 1310kg weight 32mpg
2nd Generation 5 door diesel manual 114 bhp 1442kg weight 38mpg
2nd Generation 5 door petrol auto 147 bhp 1377kg weight 30mpg
3rd Generation 5 door diesel manual 134 bhp 1585kg weight 38mpg
5th Generation 5 door hybrid CVT 222bhp 1654kg weight 50mpg
Increasing battery or other material weight doesn’t necessarily mean less efficient.
Another often repeated claim is that Hybrids are most efficient as town/ urban cars.
All our cars for the last 20yrs have been used in a rural area, perhaps 5/10% in town, the latest RAV4 hybrid is achieving 50mpg on that basis plus a new Yaris hybrid achieving 65mpg.
Can’t see us moving to EV in our lifetime tbh even without considering charging infrastructure, range anxiety, dealer support etc.
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