An interesting article indeed. I have family who live there and they discuss this too.
One thing that the article doesn't mention is that electricity is very cheap. Almost all electricity comes from hydro generation, and does not compare with the cost of electricity in the UK.
It's also a country of two halves. A significant number live in or close to Oslo where there is good public transport, high road tolls an no public parking at all in the city centre. This is where the green activists reside, young single or childless with no essential need for a car.
Contrast that with the other half who live away from the cities, who need to transport kids to school perhaps five or ten miles from home where the term 'public transport' is unknown.
Several years ago my son-in-law advertised his 3-year-old car for sale, and a chap came to view. He said he was viewing for a friend, and confirmed the friend would buy it. Next thing he got a call saying, can you meet me at the airport please? The buyer arrived at the airport, they drove into town to do a bank transfer and the buyer droped my son-in-law back at his house.
As a parting comment my son-in-law asked how long it would take the buyer to get home - and he replied '25 hours driving, two tankfuls of petrol! He would not have done that so easily with an EV!
|