> I mean, I don't see a huge push towards generic charging points all over the city despite things moving in that direction.
In London at least, the push is to get less car on the road, regardless if they are electric or not. There is no need to encourage electric adoption, only discourage cars and discourage more the one that are not electric.
I had a breakdown earlier this year and managed just fine over 2 months without the car. We fixed it because there is just no convenient way to go see the family or move children around easily and safely.
The fix for that however is probably coming from a combination of Uber-like services and automated car rental ( as long as they get to your home and back to the rental lot, you can manage the rest of the way ), rather than personal car ownership electric or otherwise.
We are not quite there yet, but considering my last car lasted me 15 years and counting, if I have a next one, it will be my last.
edit: BTW, no blaming Musk. It's not his fault if his products are desirable outside his target demographic.
In London at least, the push is to get less car on the road, regardless if they are electric or not. There is no need to encourage electric adoption, only discourage cars and discourage more the one that are not electric.
I had a breakdown earlier this year and managed just fine over 2 months without the car. We fixed it because there is just no convenient way to go see the family or move children around easily and safely.
The fix for that however is probably coming from a combination of Uber-like services and automated car rental ( as long as they get to your home and back to the rental lot, you can manage the rest of the way ), rather than personal car ownership electric or otherwise.
We are not quite there yet, but considering my last car lasted me 15 years and counting, if I have a next one, it will be my last.
edit: BTW, no blaming Musk. It's not his fault if his products are desirable outside his target demographic.