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A good point.IMO one of the big problems with EVs is that they're trying to replace internal combustion like-for-like.
There's no need for a city runabout to be capable of seating five people and travelling 200km at 120km/h when 95% of the journeys are 10km trips for a single occupant never reaching speeds above 80km/h Moving two tons of vehicle that's sized/shaped like a traditional ICE car is expensive and inefficient, whether that's fossil fuels, hydrogen, or electricity. Big EVs for high-speed, long-range journeys are crazy heavy.
I'm not advocating everyone switches to ebikes, but we need the industry to start producing smaller, lighter, more practical cars for the majority of journeys. When it comes to long-distance trips, a PHEV or just modern low-emission, highly efficient ICE is still a reasonable option. It's just important to change the outdated mindset of "one car that does everything" when it's hugely wasteful for 95% of its intended use.
We have the technology to produce lightweight (like 600kg) EVs with two seats and some cargo that can reach 100km/h with a 50km range, whilst meeting current safety requirements. That's not going to be ideal for highway journeys, but it's going to be fraction of the cost of current EVs and far more useful to most people most of the time.
What we also need, imo, is
1. A better battery technology, because lithium is too big, heavy, expensive, and dangerous in case of an accident, and
2. A change in mindset that there is one single technology that is good for everyone for every purpose. We may not have enough fossil fuels to power all vehicles indefinitely, but we may have enough for some, and
3. Better ICE technologies with cheap and easily manufacturable fuel. Hydrogen maybe?