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67% Positive

Analyzed from 5111 words in the discussion.

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#car#electric#cars#battery#https#evs#fuel#more#hybrid#charging

Discussion (220 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

physicsguyabout 3 hours ago
The biggest seller of EVs here is the salary sacrifice schemes that give a huge discount to high earners, especially those with kids.

Imagine you're on taxable income of £120k and have two chidlren in nursery. Currently you get no help with childcare costs from the government. From my own experience it's ~£6000 subsidy per child.

You can currently take out an EV salary sacrifice scheme for ~£600 per month (pre tax), and that brings your taxable income down by £7200. Put another £13k in pension. Boom, you're now getting £13k in pension p/a, and your car is effectively free, because you get £12k back in childcare subsidies.

pmg1015 minutes ago
Your car isn't 'effectively free', because you could sacrifice all £20k into the pension, paying no tax on it, and get the £12k in childcare subsidies because your income is <=£100k. The EV is costing you £7000 pa out of this.

It still might be desirable, but it isn't free.

alt227about 3 hours ago
But how long until those children are no longer in nursery and you are not subsedised for it? In ~2 years you will no longer have this help, you will be paying through the nose for the outstanding amount on your new car, and your take home will be significantly less each month.
physicsguyabout 3 hours ago
Yeah, but you're still taxed at 72% between £100 and £125k if you have a student loan (as most people in that age bracket will be), so even in that case the hit to your take home isn't that much.
mytailorisrichabout 3 hours ago
There is no need to go that high in salary (a lucky very small minority). The higher income tax band (40%) kicks in at 50k. Salary sacrifice schemes offer huge savings to many people.
KaiserProabout 2 hours ago
true it does kick in at 50k but only for stuff over 50k. so its not a cliff like 100k or if you're at the other end on universal credit.
vkouabout 3 hours ago
Yeah, but you'll have a new car.

Obviously if you don't need a new car, it's a really bad financial decision to buy one.

And even if you do, it might be a bad financial decision to buy one.

alistairSHabout 3 hours ago
Obviously if you don't need a new car, it's a really bad financial decision to buy one.

It's almost always a bad financial decision to buy a new car. The first-year depreciation is unreal.

We just bought a 1 year old Audi Q5 in the US for ~30% discount over new. And with the Audi CPO program, the warranty is just as long as a new model.

traceroute66about 3 hours ago
> Obviously if you don't need a new car, it's a really bad financial decision to buy one.

I dunno ....

At least two EV manufacturers offer a 7 year warranty on new cars on all parts INCLUDING the battery.

jampaabout 4 hours ago
This oil crisis was a huge boon for EVs. In Brazil, despite the "hate" most people have against EVs, BYD went from breaking into the top 10 in March to taking the #1 spot in consumer sales for the first time ever.
rootusrootusabout 2 hours ago
Yeah, money talks. And every time you drop another $100 bill into the fuel tank, maybe you start to wonder what it is like to not pay that. Or to not drive to a gas station at all. Then you drive one and become one of the vast majority of people who suddenly have the epiphany "I will never go back, I like this way too much."
Freedom220 minutes ago
Curious as to why American EVs never took off. The US is the most advanced country technologically and has the greatest soft power in history to make deals.
diego_moita7 minutes ago
Several reasons:

1. Unlike the rest of the world, EVs were sold in the US as muscle cars for rich people (e.g. Tesla). Everywhere else they're cheap cars for urban commuters (e.g. BYD).

2. Republicans sabotaged every attempt from the Democrats to get EVs going on.

3. Space and demography: EVs do very well in small countries (e.g. Europe) or big countries with a concentrated population (e.g.Brasil, Nigeria). They do poorly in countries with big distances and a spread out population.

slawabout 3 hours ago
> BYD sold 14,911 units in April 2026

> total vehicle sales in March 2026 was 269,483 units

So BYD market share is 5.5% in Brazil.

sandy_coyoteabout 2 hours ago
But how many BYD units were sold relative to other units?
lostloginabout 2 hours ago
According to this, 14911 were BYD, VW were 80 behind.

https://www.globalchinaev.com/post/byd-edges-out-vw-to-becom...

rsyncabout 2 hours ago
Imagine how much faster electric car adoption would be if incumbent auto makers weren’t using them as dumping grounds for experimental, half-baked, and unsafe design experiments?

We never wanted their “electric cars” … we wanted their cars, but electric.

Zigurdabout 2 hours ago
All of the German car makers, plus Hyundai, are very serious about making really good mainstream electric vehicles because they all believe that will be their core of their business sooner rather than later.
mjhay16 minutes ago
Coulda fooled me. From what I’ve seen, it seemed like they were dragged to electric kicking and screaming after other options didn’t pan out - even with assistance from regulators. Germany has a severe problem with rational consideration of energy issues.
thrownawayszabout 1 hour ago
> All of the German car makers

The basic Seat Leon combi is currently 22.000€ on promotion. And that's a spacious family car. No EV car exist at that price point in that size with a range that most people would be comfortable with it.

Yes they will exist in the future but we are still a decade away from that at least.

bluebarbet22 minutes ago
>we are still a decade away

How much will you spend on fuel during that decade? Seems likely it will be more than today's upfront cost differential. Possibly a lot more.

izacusabout 1 hour ago
Average price of sold new car in EU is around 45.000 so what exactly is your point?
tzs18 minutes ago
There are some where the EV is largely the same as the non-EV other than the necessary differences because it is in an EV such as instruments and menus.

For example Hyundai Kona EV differs inside from the Kona ICE and hybrid models by having the shifter on the column instead of on the center console and the floor is flatter from not needing to accommodate the transmission tunnel.

A mix of Googling and LLMing suggests that BMW, Genesis, Mini Cooper, Volvo, and VW also have some EVs that are very similar to their non-EV cars.

yreadabout 1 hour ago
I don't know. Kia Niro is now 10 years old and looks completely normal and you could buy it as HEV, PHEV or EV
traderj0eabout 1 hour ago
I remember when there were no mainstream EVs and everyone kept publicizing some EV concept that looks like it'd be a ride at Disney Epcot.
bobthepandaabout 2 hours ago
Yes and no. The F-150 Lightning did a lot more poorly than expected and it’s the best selling vehicle in the US.

It is interesting with the current oil shock what will happen to US automakers that have all but abandoned fuel efficient cars.

traderj0eabout 1 hour ago
The F-150 Lightning is definitely not the best selling vehicle in the US. Maybe best-selling EV pickup truck.
WarmWashabout 2 hours ago
The Achilles heel of EV adoption, and why I think Tesla has had such a leg up, is that your classic dealership really doesn't like selling EVs.

The salesman aren't knowledgeable about them, they don't have ownership experience with them, and EV's generate dramatically fewer lifetime "service" visits and parts sales.

This was common with the f150 lightning, where salesman were pretty much "If you want it I can do the paper work, but let me show you the regular F150's we have here if you like to drive places without headaches."

mattmanserabout 2 hours ago
We don't have dealerships in the UK like the US has.
WarmWashabout 2 hours ago
A true blessing. Ironically the US dealership scheme was hatched as a way to protect consumers...
evan_about 1 hour ago
How does the UK do car sales?
wxwabout 4 hours ago
> The increase reflects a rebound from an unusually weak April last year, when buyers pulled purchases forward to March to beat incoming vehicle tax increases
bluGillabout 4 hours ago
Yeah, all but diesel is up a lot. Electric only slightly more than gas as percentage
youngtaffabout 3 hours ago
bloakabout 4 hours ago
I am so confused by the categorisation of cars: BEV, HEV, PHEV and so on. I think the industry insiders who write some of these articles don't realise how hard it is for some of their readers to keep track.
sheeptabout 4 hours ago
To be fair, the article is written on a website for the auto industry, so it's reasonable for them to assume their target audience is familiar with these terms. I argue the onus is on OP for explaining these since they're sharing it to a different audience than it was written for.
LeoPantheraabout 4 hours ago
Ignore the "EV" part.

B = Battery

H = Hybrid

PH = Plug-in hybrid (Same as a hybrid but you can charge up the hybrid battery at home)

rsynnottabout 4 hours ago
> Same as a hybrid but you can charge up the hybrid battery at home

And, in practice, the battery tends to be much, much bigger. Some PHEVs are basically mediocre-range electric cars which happen to have a petrol generator.

dalyons11 minutes ago
Its time to call a spade a spade - the bulk of the PHEV category sold to date (with a few exceptions like toyota) has been an emissions scam, designed to skirt EU fleet emission laws.

In practice, most are mediocre range, low-speed only evs that effectively no one bothers to charge regularly because its impractical and annoying. The manufactures claim 80% reductions in emissions, and use those credits to allow them to sell more gas cars in the EU market. But real world emission reduction is 20%. They know this, they've known for years. Its a scam.

https://electrek.co/2026/02/19/biggest-study-yet-shows-plug-...

Some newer toyotas, newer BMWs and the coming EREVs will actually be able to be electric cars most of the time, and might live up closer to the claims. Doesnt change the fact the category has been mostly fraud until now.

Sohcahtoa82about 2 hours ago
In theory, a PHEV is the perfect middle ground for someone that wants to drive electric but has major range anxiety about road trips.

Something with a 60 mile electric range will likely satisfy all of their day-to-day driving. The generator means they don't have to charge though, so they can still take road trips without worrying about electric range.

In practice though, they're somewhat impractical. You still need an entire ICE drivetrain AND a moderately sized battery and electric motor, driving the price up.

numpad0about 3 hours ago
I wouldn't be sure if that's often the case, most PHEVs are just minor upgrades over existing hybrids. The electric motors on most hybrids, except the Nissan system, tend to only cover zero to city speeds. They need the gas engine connected to handle highway and ramp situations.
WarmWashabout 2 hours ago
...and apparently most owners never plug them in, so people just burn expensive fuel to charge their battery, while offering little or no savings over a hybrid or just the gas version.
moepstarabout 3 hours ago
Which ones?

A colleague drives a BMW 3something hybrid and as far as i know has a 14kWh battery..

Thats good for about a 100km, but i very much wouldn't consider that a "fully" electric car by any means (edit: did you edit your post? couldve sworn you said "fully electric" instead of "mediocre range"?)...

Also, what most people don't realize: if you're only (or mostly) driving it electric, you're putting many more cycles onto that tiny battery.

...which usually costs as much as a "regular" EV battery, x times the size.

https://evclinic.eu/2024/09/05/bmw-hybrid-repeated-battery-f... for example...

traderj0eabout 2 hours ago
Seems like PHEV can mean it only goes 15-30mi on a charge. Realistically how many people are actually plugging those in?
dalyons20 minutes ago
lot of comments speculating but we have the data.

> Realistically how many people are actually plugging those in?

Answer: almost no one. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/oct/16/plug-in-...

i_dursunabout 1 hour ago
Mine does about 40 miles during summer and 23 miles during winter. Given that my trips are within 25-35 miles range, I charge it daily. It’s at 9.5k miles and I filled up the tank about 7-8 times in 2 years. Rest was all electric.
londons_exploreabout 1 hour ago
They vary widely. Some have 1 mile (and the plug is therefore fairly pointless and usually just to qualify for some subsidy), whilst others do 200 miles and are effectively full EV's with a petrol generator to travel further.
iso163117 minutes ago
Most journeys are well under 30 miles.

https://www.nimblefins.co.uk/best-car-insurance/average-car-...

> The average car journey distance in the UK is approximately 8.2 miles

Johnny555about 3 hours ago
> PH = Plug-in hybrid (Same as a hybrid but you can charge up the hybrid battery at home)

You can, but in practice most people don't. And I can understand why -- it's inconvenient to have to plug in after every short trip, and the short electric range of most PHEV's means you do have to plug in after every short trip.

I plug in my EV around once a week, and it's more convenient than going to the gas station, but I'm not sure I'd want to have to plug it in every time I come home from even a short trip to the supermarket.

wffurrabout 2 hours ago
I plug in my EV almost every time I get home. The charger is hanging right next to my driver door in my driveway.
bluGillabout 1 hour ago
That is why I setup our PHEV plug to be right next to the door, we park, grab the plug and put it in. That is at most 2 extra steps.
bot403about 2 hours ago
I own an EV. If I had a phev I'd sure love to plug it in rather than pay more for gas and have to go to the station.
iso1631about 4 hours ago
> PH = Plug-in hybrid (Same as a hybrid but you can charge up the hybrid battery at home)

Surely that's the "same as a battery but you can use petrol on long journeys"

The only energy input for a "hybrid" is from petrol. It's slightly more efficient. A Toyota Yaris 1.5 hubrid gets about 65mpg rather than the 45mpg on a Skoda Kamiq

https://www.honestjohn.co.uk/realmpg/skoda/kamiq-2023

https://www.honestjohn.co.uk/realmpg/toyota/yaris-cross-2021

LeoPantheraabout 3 hours ago
> Surely that's the "same as a battery but you can use petrol on long journeys"

Not really. The petrol drivetrain takes up so much room there's no space for a large battery, so the much smaller battery will only take you a short distance if you used it alone, plus now it's much less efficient because you're carrying around a heavy engine with you.

alistairSHabout 3 hours ago
Sort of...

IIRC, the latest Honda Civic Hybrid has the ICE decoupled from the drivetrain most of the time (even if it is running to generate power), but it can couple to the drivetrain under some conditions?

swiftcoderabout 3 hours ago
> Surely that's the "same as a battery but you can use petrol on long journeys"

They put tiny batteries in a lot of plug-in hybrids. Unless you live very close to work, you’ll struggle to use it as primarily an EV

rootusrootusabout 3 hours ago
> Surely that's the "same as a battery but you can use petrol on long journeys"

No, that would be an EREV.

benj111about 3 hours ago
45 to 65mpg is a near 50% increase. I would say that's "slight"
bluGillabout 3 hours ago
Depends on how you use it. Some never plug in. Some always do. I save a ton of money without worrying about range since there is always gas when I make a roadtrip
pastudanabout 3 hours ago
Don’t forget PZEV (Partial Zero-Emissions Vehicle) which isn’t even an EV at all!
andrubyabout 2 hours ago
What horrible acronym/concept are those.

It seems to be a US thing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partial_zero-emissions_vehicle

> In California, PZEVs have their own administrative category for low-emission vehicles. The category was made in a bargain between automakers and the California Air Resources Board (CARB), so that automobile makers could delay making mandated zero-emission vehicles (ZEVs)—battery electric and fuel-cell electric vehicles.

bluefirebrandabout 3 hours ago
This is actually something I think is a pretty big failing in a lot of internet publishing

You could easily turn those terms in the article into hyperlinks to definitions.

You could even have the links go to definitions hosted on your own website to boost page reads and ad counts if you really wanted to

wffurrabout 2 hours ago
Most user agents allow you to trivially search from selection. Double-click unfamiliar word, right click, select "search" or on macOS there's also "lookup" but that really only works on dictionary words.
flakeoil25 minutes ago
Quite frankly, today there is no need to look anywhere else than a pure electric car. No point to buy an ICE with battery + electric motor. It just adds complexity and makes it expensive to service. The newly released EVs today are so good and have fantastic range.
martythemaniakabout 2 hours ago
It's actually dead simple: there are battery electric EVs and internal combustion cars. That's it.

ICE cars come with a variety of add-ons and schemes to improve efficiency: fuel injectors, ECUs, braking energy capture systems (aka hybrid), small batteries for short trips that no one plugs in (aka plug in hybrids), etc.

neogodlessabout 2 hours ago
You forgot EVs that come with an add-on that generates electricity by burning fuel!
martythemaniakabout 1 hour ago
AKA container ships and locomotives, lol.
varispeedabout 4 hours ago
There is also MHEV
Hextiniumabout 4 hours ago
"Mild" hybrid electric vehicle which is just using a oversized starter to break and then drive any accessories instead of the motor.
oblioabout 4 hours ago
And EREV, the only hybrid that makes sense.
walthamstowabout 4 hours ago
Is that extended range? I was reading about them the other day. A small ICE engine in the car but it only charges the battery, right? Basically the opposite of a Toyota hybrid.
verisimiabout 3 hours ago
where ER = Extended Range EV
reactordevabout 4 hours ago
That’s like Pedal Assist I…

Mild Hybrid… pfffft.

codedokodeabout 4 hours ago
"Must heve"?
ChrisMarshallNYabout 4 hours ago
"Mild Hybrid". Slight boost. I don't know of any on the market, but I'm sure they're there.
kieranmaineabout 4 hours ago
As a companion to this article these pages have good charts and data:

The road to electric - in charts and data - https://www.rac.co.uk/drive/electric-cars/choosing/road-to-e...

Electric car charging prices at public chargers - https://www.rac.co.uk/drive/electric-cars/charging/electric-...

sensecallabout 3 hours ago
I’m not surprised with fuel at like £1.80/L and electricity as low as 3.5p/kwh

Makes EVs quite appealing.

https://carcosttool.com/ev-vs-ice-breakeven

rootusrootusabout 3 hours ago
It also helps that they drive nice and are more convenient for most people.
barbazooabout 2 hours ago
They're also quiet and no combustion means no exhaust fumes.
gib444about 2 hours ago
> They're also quiet

As someone who lives near a busy road, I'm 100% all for them for this reason alone

The boy-racers doing 2x the speed limit with their loud exhausts and poppin can go do one

ripvanwinkleabout 1 hour ago
TSLA not in the top 10- very interesting
trollbridgeabout 3 hours ago
158p (about $8 a gallon) might be a pretty effective motivator, although electric prices need to stay reasonable for this to work.
1970-01-01about 3 hours ago
Why is the most unsaid part out of all of this fuel nonsense is that there are less cars dumping emissions into the air. The Iran war may be the best driver we've had for air quality. Bring more EVs, they're overdue by a decade.
baqabout 3 hours ago
Donald Trump and Beniamin Netanyahu in a single year did more to curb emissions than all green activists since the inception of green activism. Nobel Peace Prize worthy if you ask me!
rootusrootusabout 3 hours ago
Reverse psychology works very well on Trump but probably not Netanyahu.
lostloginabout 2 hours ago
Possibly not in this instance though, as Trump has a FIFA Peace Prize already.
Theodores41 minutes ago
I quit driving in the last century so buying petrol is not something I do. I have a bicycle for most journeys and the train for elsewhere.

Hence my perspective is different. To have everyone priced off the roads is going to make the cycling so much faster and pleasant.

I have considered getting an electric car in the past, but, one look at the traffic, and I decided against going that slow. So I thought about getting an electric bicycle, only to come to the same conclusion, a normal bicycle is all I want or need.

There is a similar story with food. No fertiliser? No problem! I only eat plants, with no processed food or dead animals. Soon the 'grow crops to fatten animals so fat people can eat them' idea will be too costly.

Of course, the world isn't going to stop eating animal corpses at every occasion or ween the adults off milk, so we will see what happens. Nonetheless, plants only is a good starting point.

I don't see electric cars as a solution except for boomers, particularly in the UK context, where the goal is to have 50% of urban journeys taken with active travel by 2030. Active travel means walking or cycling, and I am all for it.

If you are obese, car dependent and eating burgers, the situation is not good. However, if free from car dependency and able to cook from scratch with plants, then the situation is somewhat different, previously unpopular lifestyle choices make sense.

I also don't see what right I have to West Asian oil, it is not a birthright to have access to all the fuel one can afford. My view is that it is best left in the ground.

Orasabout 4 hours ago
Doesn’t increasing fuel price affect the electricity prices, which increases the charging cost?
mrobabout 3 hours ago
The UK is well suited to wind power, already has many wind turbines, and continues to install more. We have a good amount of solar panels too. Renewables provide the majority of electrical power when conditions are good and the share will only increase. Electric vehicles avoid the biggest weakness of renewables (unreliable base load), because they can be set to charge unattended when cheap electricity is available. Electricity suppliers offer variable rate tariffs specifically for electric vehicles.
Gibbon1about 1 hour ago
You start running numbers the cost of solar and wind capacity to power an electric car is about 10% of the purchase price. And considering they have a battery that can store a weeks worth of energy and spend 95% of the time just sitting. Basically not a problem.
bluGillabout 3 hours ago
Maybe, in the best case, your gas engine is maybe 45% fuel efficient, but realistically, you're probably getting closer to 20-25%. By contrast, a combined cycle power plant gets over 60%.

But that's assuming we're just running power plants off of petrol and fuels. Coal is much cheaper than petroleum in some cases. There's also a lot of people who get their power from nuclear, hydro, solar, and wind. In many cases, your electric prices are not at all affected by the increases in petrullium prices, because most of your electricity is coming from something else. In fact, I doubt there's any place in the world that all your electricity is coming from petroleum fuels. Even if that's the major input, there are almost undoubtedly other sources in the mix.

philipallstarabout 2 hours ago
> By contrast, a combined cycle power plant gets over 60%.

Over 25% of this is then lost in transmission and distribution[0] (down to 45%). Then 10-25% of that lost in charging the car[1] (down to 40%). Finally, the car itself loses about 10-15% of that[2] (down to 35%).

[0] https://www.statista.com/statistics/322834/transmission-dist...

[1] https://go-e.com/en/magazine/ev-charging-losses

[2] https://evreporter.com/understanding-the-complete-efficiency...

hgomersallabout 1 hour ago
Total UK electricity consumption is around 300 TWh annually. That would put the grid losses at less than 10% based on your link. The charging is never as bad as 25% (internal house losses are negligible for any sensible charging rate) and the car is typically ~12% charging loss. Moreover, EVs recover quite a bit too. Even in purely dissipative driving (highway driving), I get around 4 miles/kWh, which is about 4 times better than an ICE vehicle.

Furthermore, if you're going to include distributional losses, then let's also drop the available petrol by 10-15% to account for refining etc.

Finally, on anything resembling a sunny day, my car charges entirely of rooftop solar, so what efficiency do we assign to that?

0cf8612b2e1eabout 1 hour ago
That first chart is in absolute units, not percentage.

25TWh annual distribution losses off of ~300TWh usage per year is 8% loss.

rsynnottabout 2 hours ago
FWIW, I don't think there are any oil or coal power plants left in the UK. Certainly none in general operation.
tensorabout 4 hours ago
That depends entirely on where you are. In Ontario electricity is mostly hydro, nuclear, and renewables. But also, compared to burning gas directly, EVs are still more efficient and require less gas if you burn the gas to charge the EV.
rsynnottabout 4 hours ago
Somewhat. But price rises for electricity aren't remotely on the same scale as price rises for diesel and petrol, and fuel/electricity was a smaller part of the TCO to _start_ with for electric cars.
KaiserProabout 2 hours ago
Depends on how you charge and where.

If you charge at home, and you don't have a car tariff, it'll be ~25-30p per kwhr

If you get a car charging tariff then you'll be paying ~9p a kwhr.

if you are brave then you can use an agile prices which depends on the weather you can be paid to charge (my record was -11p a unit) however in winter it can be a lot high, like 45p a unit.

Charging on the street can be around 50p a kwhr up to 98p a kwhr

0cf8612b2e1eabout 3 hours ago
Electricity generation is already diversified. Nuclear, coal, gas, solar, wood, witches, etc. The fuel mix can be tweaked as the economics change. ICE vehicle fleet is stuck with one energy source.
bdcravensabout 3 hours ago
Even then, EVs are still cheaper to operate.
izacusabout 1 hour ago
UK has a massive new renewable installations which aren't affected by gas prices.
iso1631about 3 hours ago
Electric price in the uk on an off peak tariff overnight is about 7p/kWh, or about 2p/mile, so charging your car overnight with the average electric mileage (10,000 miles a year - higher than the average mileage) costs £200, about £1300 a year less than petrol.
Orasabout 3 hours ago
Thanks, I didn’t know about variable tariffs. But can this be residential or has to be on designated charging points?
rsynnottabout 2 hours ago
Residential. Very common in the UK to have a separate night rate, even before smart meters.
bluefirebrandabout 3 hours ago
Can you actually get different tariffs in the UK for residential?

In Canada most of that is pretty opaque. Electricity tariffs are not really something that most households would worry about. Businesses and Industrial usage do though

Symbiote27 minutes ago
A simple day and night tariff was introduced at some point in the 1980s in the UK.

Most places I lived had this set up.

(Nowadays smart meters offer many more options.)

longwaveabout 3 hours ago
Yes, there are multiple competing providers - all the electricity comes from a single grid but competition in how you are billed for usage.

Many people choose a single fixed or variable rate tariff, but there are also off-peak tariffs that are very cheap at night but slightly more expensive in the day (designed for EV users), or even tariffs where the rate changes every 30 minutes depending on what is being generated - in this case when there is excess solar and wind generation then sometimes the rate even goes negative and you are paid to use the excess power.

awjloganabout 3 hours ago
Yes, the newer suppliers have EV and solar friendly domestic tariffs. Plug it in overnight, and the supplier determines when the charge happens and charges at the reduced rate.
iso1631about 3 hours ago
Sure

You can base it on the wholesale price, great if you have battery storage

https://octopus.energy/smart/agile/

Or just an overnight rate

https://octopus.energy/smart/intelligent-octopus-go/

Again if you put in a £5k 10kWh battery you are golden, as you put 8kWh into your car and 8kWh into your battery every night, dropping your electric cost to £38 a month (plus the standing charge, which is far higher)

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retrac98about 4 hours ago
Fuel (diesel, specifically) in the UK is getting towards $10/gallon, so not surprising really!
thegingerabout 4 hours ago
A lot of fast chargers are over $1 per kwh so unless you have access to home charging there isn't much room for savings.
gioboxabout 3 hours ago
At some stage I wonder if the UK will need to regulate the charger industry. The price gouging is wild in places. If we look at the energy content of petrol, a litre of gas contains about 9kwh of energy, or at average pump prices 1.58/9 = ~18 pence a kwh.

For sure, EVs are far more efficient at converting a kwh of energy into forward motion, but if we assume 35 mpg (9.25 miles/litre) for the gas car, we need about 970wh to travel 1 mile. A modern EV can manage a mile on ~260wh, almost a quarter of the gas requirement.

There are public charging networks in the UK averaging 92p/kwh - we know we need much less energy to move the more efficient EV, but even with this adjustment fuel cost per mile looks like:

petrol at UK average today: 17p/mi

Electric at very expensive public charger: ~24p/mi !!

At many chargers, there are no savings at all. For comparisons sake, that 92p kwh would be just 28.6p on the most expensive domestic electricity supply, and charging at home would be ~8p per mile on the worst possible tariffs.

I've probably done some bad math somewhere here, but I think the broad picture is correct.

baqabout 3 hours ago
The market should sort this out by itself, not saying regulators shouldn’t watch closely, but competition should be enough to do its thing. Cartel formation especially should be watched for vigilantly.
KaiserProabout 2 hours ago
dpeends on the car. My Zoe does 4.8 miles per kwhr, my old car does 35 miles per gallon (or 7.6 miles per litre) petrol is currently £1.6 a litre.

Which is 21p per mile, for my petrol car

at 98p a kwhr its 20p per mile.

but in practice the electric car is 3 pence a mile for me (average car charging price for me is 15p a kwhr)

afavourabout 3 hours ago
But compared to the US home charging via a mains outlet is much more viable because it's 240v vs 110v. If you plug you car overnight you'll typically have enough charge to last you the next day.
gioboxabout 3 hours ago
This isn't as big an advantage as you might think, as a huge number of US homes have 240v sockets to power the clothes dryer:

> https://getneocharge.com/a/blog/identifying-your-240v-dryer-...

Almost everyone I know with an EV charging at home just reused the 240v dryer socket to avoid paying for a dedicated fast charger. It's often cheaper too to have an electrician fit a new 240v socket instead of the dedicated charger as well.

jbmabout 3 hours ago
I've been doing level 1 charging for the past 3 years or so. It is fine even in cold Calgary (albeit in an unheated garage)

Unless you are regularly doing upwards of 150 km/ day, it's fine.

rootusrootusabout 3 hours ago
The US is 240V. We split it into two 120V legs for some sockets, and not for others. Some people do choose to get by on 120V, true, but they are the minority. Usually people who do not drive often.
joshl32532about 3 hours ago
Most homes in US built after 1980s(?) have electrical panels with 240V.

It's used for dryer, stove etc.

iso1631about 3 hours ago
Given that the majority of people in the uk have or can have access to home charging it's not a major problem

https://www.racfoundation.org/research/mobility/still-standi...

Wales – 75% of households have – or could have – off-street parking and EV charging England – 68% Scotland – 63%

In London, sure, most homes don't have off-street parking and ev charging, but then only half the households in London have a car

https://content.tfl.gov.uk/travel-in-london-2024-car-ownersh...

benj111about 3 hours ago
I think you're somewhat underselling the problem.

Even in Wales, 25% can't. This isn't a figure you can ignore.

And that's a hypothetical, it relies on landlords playing ball etc. then there's the social issues. On the north of England we have lots of terraces built for mill workers, these aren't owned by the richest on society. So then you're in the situation of charging the poorest more for transport. And these are necessarily on towns with good transport links (think 1 bus and hour).

iso1631about 4 hours ago
Fuel in the UK is £1.58 a litre (£1.48 at one garage I passed today, £1.61 at another, some garages are certainly profiteering)

In 2022 is was £1.89 a litre and spent most of the year over £1.60 a litre

Adjusted for inflation that would be most of the year at £1.85, and a high of £2.18 a litre

https://www.racfoundation.org/data/uk-pump-prices-over-time

From 2011 to 2014 petrol was about £1.30 a litre. Adjusted for inflation terms that's £1.80-£2 a litre -- far less than current "highs".

The average UK car does 8000 miles and about 45mpg (uk gallons), or about 10 miles per litre. It thus costs 800 litres, or £1,260 a year.

Last year petrol was £1.35 a litre, and thus £184 a year less for the average car.

Fuel is insanely cheap in the UK in historic terms, just not as cheap as it was last year.

jayflux36 minutes ago
> In 2022 is was £1.89 a litre and spent most of the year over £1.60 a litre

Why are you choosing the 2022 energy crises as your baseline? Not only your choice was arbitary but you managed to choose the year fuel was at its highest as a reaction to the war in Ukraine.

That price was not representative or typical, it was a spike. You can see it here.

https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflationandpriceindices/time...

zdragnarabout 3 hours ago
Eh, last year I was paying the equivalent of £0.38 per liter over here in the States ($2 a gallon gas, $3.30 or so for diesel).

"Insanely cheap" for the UK to feels really strange for those of us way over here who tend to forget how good we have it.

rootusrootusabout 3 hours ago
> tend to forget how good we have it

That is an interesting perspective. We do not forget how good we have it, because we choose not to put high taxes on gasoline and diesel. Do drivers in the UK tend to forget that taxes are more than half the retail price they pay at the pump? Sometimes way over half. That is a policy decision.

benj111about 3 hours ago
Yes well people like to complain, and people have a short memory. If it were really a massive problem you would see a lot more smaller cars, rather than Range Rovers and BMWs.

We will see exactly the same thing again in a few years when people are 'shocked' that prices are rising again. And then expect the government to step in, even though on the interim they've bought a massive car on PCP rather than take some personal responsibility and buy a car that they can afford when inevitably something goes wrong.

washingupliquidabout 4 hours ago
People who can't afford diesel are not running out to buy an £80,000 EV I assure you.
Dochesabout 4 hours ago
EVs aren’t exactly new; there’s a deep, accessble secondhand market by now. I’ve been using a 2019 Nissan Leaf as a primary family car for two years now, that I picked up off Gumtree for around £3k. It’s been one of the best (little) cars I’ve ever owned.

Not saying new EVs aren’t pricey, but if you want into electric on a budget (i.e. because you don’t feel like you can afford to fill up on diesel) it can absolutely be done.

rcxdudeabout 2 hours ago
If you're savvy you can get a really good discount on a second-hand EV as well because people overestimate the wear on the batteries and assume a second-hand EV will have terrible range.
rsynnottabout 4 hours ago
The id.Polo starts at 22k GBP. The ordinary, petrol-driven Polo also starts at 22k. You can see how massive increases in the price of petrol and diesel might influence purchasing behaviour there...
gib444about 2 hours ago
Minor point: The id.Polo isn't released in the UK yet and prices are not confirmed. VW are not shy about price rises either I believe, so I wouldn't imagine the £21.7k figure in the media lasting more than a year if that price-point does happen.

Also, my god, £22k for a petrol base Polo! That's about £4k above inflation-adjusted prices from ~15 years ago

kieranmaineabout 3 hours ago
This is a good site for seeing the differents UK models, and their prices, that are on the market or coming onto the market.

These are all models under £20,000 - https://ev-database.org/uk/#group=vehicle-group&av-1=1&av-23...

There's also a large number of used EVs available. Here's a selection of 2024+ models between £8000-£10000

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-search?channel=cars&fuel-ty...

retrac98about 3 hours ago
Price sensitivity doesn’t spring into existence at the point something becomes unaffordable.
benj111about 3 hours ago
You have half a point here.

Diesel was traditionally the fuel of people who did high miles. Ie not the people that can't have an EV 'just in case they need to do 300 miles on a day's, because they probably legitimately are.

You kind of spoil that point by pull £80k out of your arse without looking at comparable diesels though.

oblioabout 4 hours ago
There are new 30k euros EVs on the marker right now.
sigioabout 4 hours ago
23k even in some markets, ok, small low range cars. But yeah, the 30k ones start getting good.
arjieabout 3 hours ago
A fifth of these last year were paid for by the government scheme that buys people cars - Motability. I wonder how many of these current ones are like that.
youngtaffabout 3 hours ago
Motability is not 'a Government scheme that buys people cars'

People use the mobility part of their PIP payments to lease a car from Motability which is an independent company, they could use the mobility payment to pay for taxi instead.

Chaosvexabout 2 hours ago
The government heavily subsidises it. It's not a government scheme but it walks and talks like one.
KaiserProabout 2 hours ago
its £77 a week. so its not going to buy you a top end car, you'll need to top up. if you want something "decent"
gib444about 3 hours ago
It's also misleading to treat it just like another independent private company too (not just because Motability consists of both a limited company and a charity (or two, IIRC)). The limited company reinvests revenues or transfers to its charity, not to private shareholders. Its origin was a charity.

But the only reason it exists is because of government funds and government policy.

The scheme would collapse if the government stopped allowing benefit money to be used for Motability leases. The banks lent them money under the reassurance of the government funding.

But yes, they lease the vehicles, they don't sell them.

EDIT: my comment may have some minor inaccuracies. I just found https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201719/cmselect/cmwo... - a very detailed description of the company, charities etc

MagicMoonlightabout 3 hours ago
And you can claim you have anxiety in order to get a brand new Audi. So it’s a government scheme which buys people cars.

It’s not independent, because it derives all of its income from the government and uses it to buy people brand new top of the range cars.

KaiserProabout 2 hours ago
> And you can claim you have anxiety in order to get a brand new Audi.

You're gonna have to cite sources on that one, but I would sincerely doubt that £77 a week will allow you to lease an Audi.

Also the pip claimant has to be probed by a panel every three years to keep getting the benefit, unlike say a state pension (but I paid for that I mean possibly you did, its still a non means tested benefit, unlike PIP)

asdefghykabout 3 hours ago
I expect , data such as ... would be illuminating here ...

Electric cars registered in countries with large land mass?

"..Electric car adoption , ranked by value of government incentives.."?

Eventually I just searched for

    "... graphs relating to EV adoption"

    " ..Relationship between country land mass and ev adoption rate.." ?
I have not posted links, not sure if its allowed.
rootusrootusabout 3 hours ago
Since this is a discussion, I would suggest it would be most helpful if you just provided your opinions explicitly. And you are welcome to post links to back up assertions that involve facts, of course!
rcontiabout 1 hour ago
Holy crap the scrolling behavior on this site is the worst I've seen. It hijacks my browser (Chrome)+OS X trackpad scrolling speed and inertia in a horrible way.
lenerdenatorabout 2 hours ago
Interesting how that doesn't seem to be a front where Europe wants to isolate itself from foreign influence; the models mentioned in the link seem to be Chinese in origin, not European.
mrob37 minutes ago
Unlike with fuel, we're not burning the EVs, so even if China cuts off the supply we can keep using the ones we've already got. It would be inconvenient, but not an urgent problem like loss of access to fuel.
lenerdenator21 minutes ago
It's less about fuel and more about industrial dependence.
youngtaffabout 3 hours ago
This has a breakdown of the numbers by fuel type, brand etc.

https://www.smmt.co.uk/vehicle-data/car-registrations/