As Tesla Model 3 hits the streets, where are the other electric vehicles?

It might seem like there’s more news about electric cars lately than actual electric cars on the road. Automakers are pouring billions into an uncharted electric future because the cars are getting cheaper more quickly than expected, and because governments worldwide want concrete action against climate change. The ambitious plans present a jarring contrast to what’s actually happening in showrooms today. In the U.S., for instance, low gasoline prices have super-charged sales of pickups and sports utility vehicles.

1. Who’s doing what with electric cars?

Just this month: Tesla took a step toward becoming a mass producer when the $35,000 Model 3 sedan started rolling off a California assembly line. Volvo said it will begin in two years phasing out cars that run just on fossil fuels. France said it plans to eliminate gasoline- and diesel-powered vehicles entirely by 2040, and the U.K. followed suit. The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority approved the purchase of 95 electric buses as it moves toward a zero-emission fleet by 2030.

2. How many electric cars do people buy today?

Battery-powered and plug-in cars may have been around since the 1800s, but from a sales sense, they’re still in their infancy. Chinese consumers bought about 289,000 last year, more purchases than any other market, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Europeans purchased 215,000, and U.S. consumers bought 150,000. That’s compared with 92 million internal-combustion vehicles sold globally in 2016, and 17.6 million in the U.S. alone. 

3. What about tomorrow?

Battery-powered cars and gas-electric plug-in hybrids are poised to grow so fast that, by 2040, they’ll make up more than half of vehicles sold globally, according to BNEF forecasts.

4. Which market may lead the charge?

China — for different reasons than in other markets. Yes, the Chinese are grappling with pollution and worried about climate change, just like (almost) everybody else. But their leaders want to move away from gasoline primarily because China’s heavy dependence on imported oil is seen as a key strategic vulnerability. To protect itself, China is eyeing quotas that by 2025 could mean that as much as a fifth of new vehicles will be battery-only or plug-in, according to researchers at University of California, Davis.

5. Does this mean goodbye gasoline?

No, just less gas, at least for the near future. Toyota sold 1.4 million gas-electric hybrids in 2017 and expects to continue doing so for many years. In the long run, according to the Japanese giant, fuel-cell cars powered by hydrogen will be the big winners. But even as carmakers are pouring large sums into research and development of electric vehicles and batteries, they’re also working to get more out of the internal-combustion engine. Toyota just introduced a four-cylinder Camry engine that converts 41 percent of the energy in gasoline into usable power. That’s double the thermal efficiency from 20 years ago.

6. So why is Volvo getting rid of gasoline-only cars?

It’s partly about carbon but also about diesel. European automakers and their regulators have long relied on diesel to combat air pollution, but that strategy has been undercut by Volkswagen’s cheating scandal. New European rules for 2020 will cut allowable carbon dioxide emissions by a third, a bigger drop than diesel alone can provide. European shoppers can now select from 52 vehicles with fully or partly electric motors; this number will grow to 95 by 2021, BNEF says.

7. How does Tesla fit in?

Elon Musk plans to be building 20,000 of his cheaper Model 3 sedans a month by December, below predictions the CEO made last year. With traditional automakers sinking ever larger sums into electric car and battery research, Musk may not have the post-petroleum spotlight mostly to himself for long. But he’s still widely credited as the visionary whose first electric cars captured the public imagination like no others.

8. How much do electric cars cost?

Because of the batteries they require, electric cars will be more expensive to build than their gasoline counterparts for about a decade, BNEF says. For now, manufacturers must essentially give them away to meet emissions requirements in California, which has written its own clean-air rules since 1970. (Nine other states have embraced these rules, and together with California make up about 30 percent of U.S. sales.) GM was said to anticipate losing as much as $9,000 on every Chevrolet Bolt that leaves a showroom before sales began. Fiat Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne griped three years ago that he hoped nobody bought the Fiat 500e electric car, “because every time I sell one, it costs me $14,000.”

9. Why aren’t electric cars more popular?

A big issue is long recharging times, which mean the most convenient way to replenish a battery is to plug in overnight. This is an option mostly for people who can afford to purchase their own recharging equipment and install it in a private, lockable garage. Another factor is low gasoline prices, which don’t give much incentive to switch. California regulators reported in January that more than three-quarters of survey respondents had yet to seriously consider a plug-in electric car.

10. What needs to change to get to an electric-car future?

Battery costs are the single most important factor, according to BNEF. Lithium-ion batteries, plus the necessary packaging equipment, will drop to $73 per kilowatt hour by 2030, from $273 currently, BNEF says. A shortage of both in-home and public recharging stations remains a massive, unsolved challenge, the research group says. Public awareness and enthusiasm for electric cars needs to grow, and this in turn will encourage governments to maintain public subsidies as the technology matures.

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