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_hypx | 2 years ago

It's part where 270 million people charge their EVs every day and the load on the grid that is the problem. Also, ripping up tens of millions of park spacings and install all of these charging stations is not easy either. It is certainly nothing like a parking meter.

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matthewdgreen|2 years ago

Upgrading the grid is already baked into the cake. Given the rapid ocean temperature warming, surging heat waves and general acceleration of bad climate outcomes it isn’t like “do nothing and keep burning gas” is on the table. We either electrify, stop driving, or suffer increasingly calamitous environmental consequences that are much more economically dire than being forced to improve our grid.

As far as the idea that we can’t install AC wiring in public and private parking spaces, that isn’t even worth discussing. Do you know how much money it costs to build and maintain a parking space? At least chargers will come with a revenue stream that can be leveraged to pay for the construction.

_hypx|2 years ago

That's a delusional viewpoint. "Doing nothing" is absolutely on the table. In fact, it is the most likely outcome for a very long time to come. Pretty soon, you will hear about geoengineering solutions. Whether you like it or not, it will be seen as the most realistic solution on the table, if not the only one.

solarman5000|2 years ago

This is mitigated with OpenADR and V2G technology. Consumers can set when they charge (or discharge) based on utility incentives. So its not like everyone goes home and charges their car at the same time..

_hypx|2 years ago

People aren't going to put up with the grid taking power away from your car. If we fear battery life today, this will amplify that problem significantly.