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Automakers Cave To Biden’s Electric Car Dreams, And Ignore Their Own Customers

When President Joe Biden declared that he wants all cars sold to be “zero-emission” by 2035, carmakers didn’t raise a peep of protest. Worse, they are starting to fall in line with promises to go all-electric, even though the vast majority of consumers don’t want these cars.

General Motors made a big splash earlier this year when it promised to sell only electric cars by 2035.

“General Motors is joining governments and companies around the globe working to establish a safer, greener and better world,” CEO Mary Barra said days after Biden was sworn in. “We encourage others to follow suit.”

Honda later announced plans to make only battery-powered cars by 2040. Volvo said it will go all-electric by 2030. Ford said in February that it would invest at least $22 billion worldwide in the next few years to build electric vehicles.

These announcements were all greeted with Hosannas from the left (even though the overall environmental benefits of “zero-emission” cars is far from clear). But there’s one thing missing from all this cheering. The consumer.

These companies are throwing billions of dollars into researching and developing a product that consumers overwhelmingly reject.

Despite massive taxpayer rebates to electric car buyers, a multitude of subsidized recharging stations, and the constant talk about how electric automobiles will save the planet, sales of plug-ins accounted for a tiny 2% of all cars sold in the U.S. last year. Domestic sales of Chevy’s gas-guzzling Silverado pickups alone last year doubled the combined sales of electric cars from all makers.

We keep being told that what’s holding sales back is the lack of charging stations and insufficient taxpayer incentives. But since when have such inconveniences ever held back a product that is wildly popular with consumers? If consumers actually wanted EVs, there’d instantly be charging stations on every corner as companies looked to cash in.

What’s really hindering electric car sales is the inconvenience factor. Even when charging stations are nearby, they simply can’t go as far as gas-powered cars and require far too long to refuel.

“EVs can travel average barely half the distance of gas-powered vehicles,” notes Car and Driver. Driving speeds, weather, and other factors can dramatically shorten the range of EVs. When Car and Driver tested a Tesla Model 3 in cold weather, it found that using the heater can “kill 60 miles of range, a significant chunk of the Model 3’s 310-mile EPA rating.”

Worse, while it takes minutes to fill up an empty gas tank, it can take hours to fully charge an electric car. Leaving a car plugged into a conventional outlet overnight will give you enough juice to go all of about 30 miles. Even so-called fast-chargers are tedious compared with a simple fill-up at the gas station. (Tesla’s “Superchargers” take a little more than an hour to fully charge its cars, Business Insider reports.)

As a result, not only are car buyers shunning electric cars, they are returning the ones they have for gas-powered autos. A study published in the journal Nature Energy found that one in five electric car owners reports switching back to gas because of the hassles of owning an EV. And that’s in California – the most EV-friendly state in the country.  

For those who need only a commuter car, short ranges and long refueling times might not be a big deal. But most families want cars that can perform a variety of functions, such as go on long trips, haul big loads, keep a heater running when it’s cold out, and so on.

EV fans keep claiming that solutions to these problems are just around the corner, but electric cars have been around since before the internal-combustion engine, and those problems have yet to be solved.

So what are car makers going to do if consumers continue to turn their noses up at the fancy new battery-powered cars they are churning out? What will GM or Honda do if they have no gas-powered cars to fall back on? How will these companies justify their massive investments in plug-in research and development?

Simple. Automakers will become the biggest, fiercest, and most relentless lobbyists for electric car mandates. If consumers continue to flock to the remaining gas-powered cars available to them, the only way to stop such “misbehavior” would be to have the government outlaw the sale of such cars.

In other words, you will have private industry teaming up with big government to dictate to consumers what they can and can’t buy.

What is that system of government called again? Oh, right, national socialism, aka, fascism.

— Written by the I&I Editorial Board

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I & I Editorial Board

The Issues and Insights Editorial Board has decades of experience in journalism, commentary and public policy.

5 comments

  • Going all-electric is a physical impossibility. When there are no coal, gas, or nuclear power plants left, there will be no energy to run the millions of charging stations. Wind and solar are the Left’s pipe dream. But, the Left is fine with this. People will not be able to travel. But, there will also be no food so, you won’t have the energy, no pun intended, to travel anyway. This is all about control. The coup de grace is that with all-electric cars, the pollution will be even worse than with Henry Ford’s invention. Those pesky unintended consequences always bite us in the rear.

    • jeff:
      People don’t realize that controlling travel, and where you live, is the point.
      Like Macron said to the yellow Vests about the high Gas Taxes, “Move to the Cities.”
      leave your farms your homes in the suburbs, and move to the cities (where we can control you).
      Going on long trips with the family?
      Ya Think?
      Got your CV19 Passport. You can only fly on trips so we control where you go, who ou visit, what you see.
      This is not about the environment.

  • Auto makers going electronic is a death wish. Having lived in Montana, Arizona and know well Wyoming, Nevada and other wide-open states electric cars just don’t do well. Long spaces between cities or services. The other hitch is having lived in L.A. and driving freeways where you can sit for literally an hour in a traffic jam – electric cars won’t make it. Why stupid ideas seem to be so prevalent these days makes you wonder about the intelligence of these last few generations.

  • Time to make biden Walk to all his big time Meetings with World Leadersand the rest of the Agenda 21 Globalists

  • Either Americans will wake up and ‘just say no’ or we won’t.

    It’s an exciting time to be alive.

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