Point is, how many people - who aren't driving commercially - do 400km a day?
The original comment was that unless EVs had 400+ km range they weren't practical - but, as I said, how many people would exhaust the range of an EV in one day whilst they were driving around? Given that you can recharge at home at the end of the day.
The biggest selling EV to date is the first generation Leaf and that has about 150km - 200km range, which seems to have worked for a lot of people. More range is better of course ....
Arapiles
2014 D4 HSE
Is this what you're referring to?
Long queues at Tesla Supercharger station raises questions about the readiness of the EV market - MSPoweruser
In California, at Thanksgiving. Not an everyday occurrence.
Arapiles
2014 D4 HSE
Were you aware that the Australian grid is crashing because of EVs? No, I wasn't either, but it must be true because it's written at this climate denialist's website:
The half-mile electric car charging queue in the US << JoNova
"In other achievements EV’s are already causing some grid failures in Australia (and we hardly have any EV’s)"
Curious about this, I followed the link and it turned out to be her quoting Robert Gottliebsen - writing in the Australian - about a unnamed acquaintance of his who supposedly lived in an unnamed street in Melbourne where because Teslas were charging the street was being blacked out. Not, you'll note "the grid", being the whole electricity system.
Right.
Renew did an article about this claim:
https://reneweconomy.com.au/murdoch-media-and-the-myth-about-tesla-evs-causing-blackouts-84284/
and actually spoke to the grid operators, who said:
" “In regards to home EV chargers, they are not causing reliability issues, such as outages, on our networks,” said Emma Tyner, who speaks on behalf of Powercor, Citipower and United Energy.
“We have not had blackouts or major network issues caused by EVs in our network,” said Helena Lilley, from Ausnet."
Nonetheless, that baseless claim is still up there on the climate denialists website.
If people are reading that kind of crap is it any wonder that EVs are seen as negatively as they are?
Meanwhile, in countries like Japan, free of this kind of idiocy, people are just getting on with it and buying lots of EVs.
Arapiles
2014 D4 HSE
Huh? It's talking about the average length of a commute for people who are employed. Only employed people commute to work. People without jobs, by definition, don't go to work. Therefore they don't commute. Reference to driving was mine, but the ABS just referred to commuting:
The Place of Usual Residence (the area where a person usually lives) and Place of Work (the area where a person usually works) of employed people over the age of 15 years were collected in the 2016 Census of Population and Housing. The distance between these two locations represents commuting distance on the journey to work. The ABS has calculated data on commuting distances based on the assumption that a person has followed the shortest road network path, or where this was not possible a straight line distance, with no stops when commuting to work. This data can inform policy and research around the commuting behaviours of Australians and highlight differences across the country in the design and sustainability of towns and cities.
Accompanying this data are Interactive Maps that have been created to visualise the commuting distances of employed Australians by Statistical Area Level 2(SA2s). SA2s are medium-sized general purpose areas, which represent a community that interacts together both socially and economically. The maps can be viewed from Interactive Maps - Commuting Distance, just use a keyword area like ‘Melbourne’ to get started:
- Commuting Distance from Place of Usual Residence
- Commuting Distance to Place of Work
This article has focused on the concept of ‘everyday commutes’ and as such data on average commuting distances has only included commutes less than 250 kilometres (km). This threshold is considered a likely maximum distance for a daily commute and has been based on previous analysis conducted by the Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics (BITRE) in the Australia's commuting distance: cities and regions paper.
More information on the methodology for calculating distance to work can be found in the Explanatory Notes tab at the top of this page.
AVERAGE DISTANCE FROM PLACE OF USUAL RESIDENCE
This section of the article explores the distance people travel to work based on the area where they live. In Australia, the average commuting distance people travelled from their place of usual residence was 16.0 kilometres (km). Around 7.4 million people (or 73% of employed people over the age of 15 years) commuted a distance of less than 20 km to work.
Arapiles
2014 D4 HSE
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