Without wishing to labour the point here, there are considerable upsides to EV ownership. For those of us who are actually trying to make an effort to reduce our footprint so that our kids can inherit an earth that isn't fecked.
I recycle as much as possible, even washing out plastic pots. But I liken EV to soft plastic. Everyone knows they should recycle it, but it's very often hard to do so - certainly a lot more difficult than hard plastics. Most councils do not offer kerbside recycling, so it needs to be taken to a specific recycling bin. I've not managed to locate one of these near me and I'm not prepared to make a special trip to drop it off. So I want to recycle it, I know I should recycle it, but it's too hard to do. If the govt made it easier to do, then I'd do it.
And this is where I feel we are with EVs. Many people think they probably should do it, even if they don't really want to, but things like additional cost, and fear (actual or fictional) of the ability to charge easily is putting them off. To really sell people on the idea, then you need to persuade them that it's easier to do. People will always do something that's easier - ever heard of the
desire path phenomenon.
For people that can afford to do so then maybe they're willing to absorb that cost. But for many that current additional cost of ownership puts the cars out of reach. So they either have to come down a sector (eg buy a VW Polo rather than a Golf) or move to a cheaper brand.
I fully admit, I'm a car snob, I wouldn't have many of those Chinese brands if you paid me to take them. We worked on the launch of a new Range Rover competitor EV a little while ago, and even then (2 years ago) the data showed that there were 200 new EV car brands annually. They won't all survive and I would also worry about long-term warranties buying from a manufacturer that's sprung up out of nowhere.
For the sake of coming clean, it makes absolutely no sense to attempt to charge our
car (an Audi Q5 55TFSI-e) anywhere but at home - not ounless you're going somewhere and can leave it to charge. It only has a 14.5kW battery to augment the petrol engine, so will only do 25 miles in full EV mode.
And it only charges at 7.4kWh so takes two hours to fully charge. Though it used to take all night when using the 3-pin charger. You can't realistically stop a journey and sit for two hours to get an additional 25 miles.
Where it benefits from the battery is that you can go into ULEZ zones and, where possible, for shorter journeys in town we do use it in full EV mode. But the real benefit is improved performance. When I was a kid a car that would do 0-60 in 5 seconds was legendary. To think of a 2,666kg car doing it is crazy.
In conclusion, our initial taste of EV ownership (an extended weekend with an ID buzz) was enough to convince us that an EV car was great, but the experience wasn't. We weren't fully sold, which I guess is why we didn't go fully EV.