PHEV, so it depends on usage. Even more so than a parallel hybrid like the Prius.
Less seats
Is there a cup holder even?
Pure EVs are a technical and practical dead end in my view. No idea how the idea they're suitable for mass adoption has been able to proliferate.
For a small minority of use cases and home setups they're viable, thats it though.
H2 Electric is a much better solution.
I got that idea
Its funny to me to see the major differences between people on that subject. I don't disagree with you - I don't believe we need an EV for everything.
If we want a real transition we need more specialized tools for transport. The best method for each purpose. The ICE was a catch all, and specialization happened within the world of the ICE. I believe expanding that view beyond the ICE is the first step. So sure, the EV in its current form isn't the way it'll be forever, nor for everyone. I fully accept that. And at the same time, I see the advantages of these cars driving one myself.
My set of conditions:
- own driveway with charge point
- leased car
- work commute about 120 KM/day (60+60)
- solar panels on roof
- charge point density in country is perfect (Netherlands)
nederlandelektrisch.nl
You have to imagine that a large portion of the world population lives in areas similar to mine wrt population density and commute. They can all make it happen perfectly fine with a 420km WLTP ranged car like the ID3 I'm driving rn - it gives a worst case scenario range of 250km (winter tyres, wind/rain, >120km/h) so you can easily get 300km out of it in all other cases. In summer now I have 330km calculated range based on highway drives at 136km/h. The only time I switch is for car holiday, simply because I don't want to have the hassle of finding charge points abroad, which isn't quite as simple as it is here. But with sufficient planning, even that would be possible now. I did do a trip on ferry to Scotland with the ID3 a few months back... decided to take a risk and delay charging until I was in the Netherlands again. Finally found my charger with a mere 20km on the battery
YOLO versus range anxiety, the former wins
And overall, EVs are just a lot more no nonsense in their whole aesthetic, the ID3 cabin is pretty much empty save from a touchscreen and some essentials. No christmas tree of buttons and lights, the center console is storage, cup holder and high power USB charge/connect point. All the carry-overs from the ICE (E Golf etc) are sub par and feel out of place, too, as there are some left, like lighting and side mirror controls. If you touch those for a moment you feel like you're back in that ICE. That said - touch for everything in a car isn't something I would prefer; they really need a better solution to use that screen, like a joystick or directional pad that is seen elsewhere - at least something physical you can use blindly. Never quite understood why high NCAP rated cars are even allowed to have touch tbh, with all of its lag its horrible to use while driving. Maybe thats the point
The most important environmental advantage of EVs in high population density areas, IMHO, is that car pollution is removed from those population hubs. It is much, much more sensible to relocate that to the factories that create the vehicles and the plants that generate the power. That advantage would count for any battery powered / zero emission car. This is also the primary argument to kill off the Diesel. We're looking at a massive, multi faceted challenge wrt transport and climate, no single solution is gonna tick all the boxes.