And at this time of year, with heaters, heated screens, rear windows, wipers and the like, I'll not be buying an EV anytime soon to watch the mileage levels drop like a stone.
Yes there may be benefits for some, but the style of driving of many motorists makes an EV unpractible. At the weekend I was in remote parts of Yorkshire for work, and there's few if any public chargers - and mobile signals are poor, so summon a rescue? Ha!
While there are plans to rollout more chargers, can they be installed to keep pace with the switch to EV, and can the National Grid cope? No one really knows. There's also a danger with EV's being silent, and it's only time before there's a fatality in a shopping centre car park.
I read a report on the Corsa-e and another EV at the weekend, and my conclusion is range anxiety is THE issue and will remain so. You cannot disguise or brush over it. I fill my ICE car up, have 600+ mile range, so why would anyone want to buy an EV with a sub-200 mile range (unless you've silly money), then having to stop at least three times for 45-60mins (and queue with others for a charger?) to achieve the same 600+ mile range? Nah, not for me.
What the AA is reporting comes as no surprise. More fool them for believing the salesman's waffle.
You can hype EV's up as much as you want, they are overpriced and simply haven't got an adequate range, so are no match on what we have now.
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