yep plenty people will because they dont give a chuff about the environment, you are in a large cluster of people,
What a load of rubbish.
Sort the planes, ships, agricultural vehicles, HGV's & LGV's first then worry about the cars.
yep plenty people will because they dont give a chuff about the environment, you are in a large cluster of people,
Monday night I had to park in the car park at the back of the flats. (Around 20 spaces and similar number of garages for 60 flats. The garages are rented, so no guarantee that all garages are used by residents). The only space I could park, as is often the case when i get home from a late shift, is a concrete slope to a double gate allowing access for ride on lawnmowers to cut the grass. Not supposed to park there so have to move it before 8am just incase they turn up to cut the grass. Last night someone else had parked there, so I had to park a few hundred meters down the road. There has been the odd occasion when I have had to park in another road completely because there's no spaces closer.I can't park next to my house or near my work. Certainly not close enough to safely charge anyway.
Smart money will be buying a diesel just before the cut off date, they will be cheap because they won't be able to sell them after.Smart money people will slowly buy into hybrids, dumb money will just keep buying diesels right up to the wire.
Absolutely, I'll be in that queue unless there's a genuine all EV alternativeIf your correct they will be giving diesel cars away in 2029 and I would have one
I'd go on holidayIf you cared about the planet and you had £10k - £15k spare cash, would you spend it on replacing your domestic central heating boiler with a heat pump, or put it towards buying an EV?
Smart money will be buying a diesel just before the cut off date, they will be cheap because they won't be able to sell them after.
well that depends on your method of thinking, when you look at where cars spend a good portion of their lives and spread that out it is actually quite easy,
remember the average electric car will only need plugging in every 3 or 4 days and that could be done at a work place or on a shopping trip or a couple of hours at the cinema.
also the government didn't suddenly build a network of fuel stations over the last 50 years, people looking for fat profits did. think of all the derelict petrol stations coming up, plenty of room there for 20 fast chargers, quick stop off on way home for 20 minutes every couple of days.
the average commute in the UK is something like 26 miles a day, where as some folks will come on and say they need 600 miles a day, well there will be vehicles that will do that in 10 years time no drama, people need to stop crying about the loss and embrace the gain, quiet clean cities and towns.
Yes, what ever date they choose, let's call it Januarý 1st 2030, no new diesel or petrol cars can be sold unless they are a hybrid. So if dealers still have new non hybrid stock, they are left with too choices as the date draws closer, pre register their stock before end of December 2029 or sell off cheaply to clear the stock. Either way there will be bargains to pick up, just as dealers had to do with non compliant vehicles that didn't meet the WLTP emissions when it was implemented.Why would you not be able to sell them after? The ban is on new car sales only, isn't it?
Yes, what ever date they choose, let's call it Januarý 1st 2030, no new diesel or petrol cars can be sold unless they are a hybrid. So if dealers still have new non hybrid stock, they are left with too choices as the date draws closer, pre register their stock before end of December 2029 or sell off cheaply to clear the stock. Either way there will be bargains to pick up, just as dealers had to do with non compliant vehicles that didn't meet the WLTP emissions when it was implemented.
they will be cheap because they won't be able to sell them after.
Excellent point.If you cared about the planet and you had £10k - £15k spare cash, would you spend it on replacing your domestic central heating boiler with a heat pump, or put it towards buying an EV?
You are still thinking with petrol station mentality. Vast majority of cars are parked over 90% of its lifetime. There must be opportunity to charge up during that period without you waiting for it to charge.The final point is that if low on fuel I can fill up in less than 5 minutes. I can also carry a fuel can in case I run out, so I can let my tank get low, but with electric I would need to be keeping it at 50% + as I wouldnt know when the next fill-up point would be plus I may not want to sit around for 30mins while I get a top up.
As in my reply, they will be banned from sale. They could only be broken up and sold for spares. So they need to be sold before the cut off date. Hence there will be bargains to be had. The only thing that would prevent that is if all manufacturers were only producing hybrids and ev's long before that date, but they would need to do the same again long before 2035, when hybrid sales are banned.Yes, I understand that but how does that relate to
Excellent point.
I'd rank it as follow, in order of which ones to go for:
1. domestic heat pump
2. solar hot water
3. solar PV
4. EV (only if you can't cycle)
But in terms of industry maturity is as follow:
1. solar hot water
2. EV (overtook solar PV over last few years)
3. solar PV
....
10. domestic heat pump
I did consider the green home grant for a heat pump, but it's too much outlay for very little usability and functional gain. Unlike changing from ICE to EV.
Changing to EV gives:
- easy home charging
- 1/4 of the fuel cost
- instant throttle response
plus other benefits
You are still thinking with petrol station mentality. Vast majority of cars are parked over 90% of its lifetime. There must be opportunity to charge up during that period without you waiting for it to charge.
Today for example, I had to pop into the office for the afternoon. Didn't charge overnight, had 60% in the battery, drove to work with 10% remaining, plugged it in for a few hours. It'll be almost fully charged when I'm ready to leave. Zero sitting around for it to charge.
He has already explained he doesn't have the advantage of home charging or a known charge point wherever he would have to park during the day whilst at work, so making a journey just to charge up and wait 20-30 minutes each time would be his only alternative.You are still thinking with petrol station mentality. Vast majority of cars are parked over 90% of its lifetime. There must be opportunity to charge up during that period without you waiting for it to charge.
Today for example, I had to pop into the office for the afternoon. Didn't charge overnight, had 60% in the battery, drove to work with 10% remaining, plugged it in for a few hours. It'll be almost fully charged when I'm ready to leave. Zero sitting around for it to charge.
What a load of rubbish.
Sort the planes, ships, agricultural vehicles, HGV's & LGV's first then worry about the cars.
Neither.If you cared about the planet and you had £10k - £15k spare cash, would you spend it on replacing your domestic central heating boiler with a heat pump, or put it towards buying an EV?
He has already explained he doesn't have the advantage of home charging or a known charge point wherever he would have to park during the day whilst at work, so making a journey just to charge up and wait 20-30 minutes each time would be his only alternative.
As in my reply, they will be banned from sale. They could only be broken up and sold for spares. So they need to be sold before the cut off date. Hence there will be bargains to be had. The only thing that would prevent that is if all manufacturers were only producing hybrids and ev's long before that date, but they would need to do the same again long before 2035, when hybrid sales are banned.
As I've said in my first post. EV isn't for everyone. Certainly not now, but in 2030? Same as many people already voiced, I doubt it. This is why fossil fuel cars are still permitted to be sold after 2030.Thats fine but if a trip to work takes up 50% of your charge I would not want to be at 60% at the start of the journey!
The fact that is getting overlooked is that while cars are parked up a lot, millions cannot charge at home, which is the obvious solution. As someone who used to do 1k a week, how would I cope if I am out on the road all day and am unable to charge at home?
When I worked at Sky, parking was at a premium, so we often had to park on side streets and walk 20 mins to office. How would I charge up for my 100 mile journey each way?
In theory what you say makes a lot of sense but not in practice!
Smart Car Manufactures and dealers will only be selling hybrid vehicles in 5 years time never mind this made up 10 years people are clinging to.
buying a new diesel in the week before i doubt if you will find dealers with them
I can see the price of ICE fuel rising steeply after the new sales ban. Might take a few years though!
Rising??I can see the price of ICE fuel rising steeply after the new sales ban. Might take a few years though!
That's why I'll start my hunt 6 months before.
![]()
As I've said in my first post. EV isn't for everyone. Certainly not now, but in 2030? Same as many people already voiced, I doubt it. This is why fossil fuel cars are still permitted to be sold after 2030.
The biggest issue is parking. If you haven't got guarantee that you will be able to charge at end of your journey, obviously starting a journey with only 10% left at the destination is madness. I agree. But as you get to know your car, you'll know its capability on your usual routes.
According to PodPoint, 60% of household have off street parking. https://pod-point.com/electric-car-news/electric-car-no-driveway
So the problem isn't as big as it's been made out by people.
They said the saem about 4 star leaded though.
Rising??
Less demand -> falling?
On a related note, I think the drive-as-you-pay tax scheme would work well. People overly concentrate on the money EV drivers must pay but often forget there's no chance for any government to only roll this out on EV. The most likely outcome is to have this rolled out on top of existing running cost. Meaning current 10p per mile ICE vs 2.5p per mile EV could become 15p per mile vs 7.5p per mile.
So, 15p per mile is £1.50 per 10 miles which is what a ICE car gets per litre assuming an average (across all sizes / classes of car) of 45-50mpg which is dearer than current petrol and diesel prices?On a related note, I think the drive-as-you-pay tax scheme would work well. People overly concentrate on the money EV drivers must pay but often forget there's no chance for any government to only roll this out on EV. The most likely outcome is to have this rolled out on top of existing running cost. Meaning current 10p per mile ICE vs 2.5p per mile EV could become 15p per mile vs 7.5p per mile.
I sincerely doubt that, still got a 60 year old 2 stroke scooter and similar scaremongering has gone on about them for decades with absolutely no action.nah they will be done by diesel years before that, factories will be changing tooling, new supply chains, you're deluding yourself
Google tells me theres one within 2 miles of my house and about a dozen more in a 6 mile radiusNot sure where I could get proper 4* leaded these days.
I calculated based on 10p per mile I got from my 55mpg diesel. For argument sake, I added 5p per mile as the proposed "pay to drive tax".So, 15p per mile is £1.50 per 10 miles which is what a ICE car gets per litre assuming an average (across all sizes / classes of car) of 45-50mpg which is dearer than current petrol and diesel prices?
Also, Im failing to see the reasoning or justification in taxing the hell out of EV's given the current taxations based on emissions so if EVs are so good for the environment how can taxing them the same as a clean diesel be justified? It seems contradictory to me.
We looked at hybrids before going all the way to straight EV. At the time, it seemed that any hybrid (that we could afford) needed to run its ICE for a few minutes before it could run on electric only. That would be as long as it would take to get to town. For people living outside town, great but for us, we'd still be belching exhaust fumes both ways. Although walking would be the ideal option, it's not viable a lot of the time due to the amount of kit that often gets taken down/brought home and the hill coming home is a killer! If bicycles weren't so uncomfortable, that is a possibility but not for me.
It was a 2013 model but had a Lexus 200 hybrid. Thought the hybrid but was rubbish. As soon as you accelerated hard it would switch to petrol, and it would only do electric below 20 or 15 mph. Basically fine for crawling or going round a car park but was not impressed. Things might have changed though.
I imagine as demand for fuel drops, the price will follow up until it becomes uneconomical to produce petrol or diesel for vehicle fuel purposes, at which point it will go up again.I can see the price of ICE fuel rising steeply after the new sales ban. Might take a few years though!
Now I see more EV around, I can see it taking off. The demand for better recharging might drive innovative solutions. Currently, I can stick my iPhone on a pad and it will charge without a plug going into the phone. Similar technology *might* be feasible for cars - park into a slot, and the car will automatically charge up without you needing to do anything. You might be able to swap out an emptyish battery for a new, fully charged one the way you swap out AA batteries in your remote (most likely automated and mechanised).
I think there will be more infrastructure once the Govt and private companies can work out how to make a profit.
Batteries will have to be recycled to minimise the damage done to the environment in terms of mining for precious metals like cobalt, lithium and nickel. There are reports of children being used to mine. There’s also pollution damage with toxic chemicals leaking into local water supplies. So we need better batteries, produced in a way that doesn’t harm the environment.