Commodus
Diamond Member
- Oct 9, 2004
- 9,215
- 6,820
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The transition will probably happen sooner than you think.
I see it as a snowball effect. Right now we're in this awkward early phase where most EVs are still expensive and the infrastructure is still limited, but there's going to be a point in a few years where you suddenly find that $25,000 EVs are a practical reality and the charging networks are considerably better. And from there, adoption could accelerate.
I wouldn't say the end is coming in 10 years. But when GM plans to stop selling gas cars by 2035 and other brands are likely to follow suit, there could be a culture change in the next several years. When brands stop selling new gas cars, the technology will have already been on the decline for years — the only people still buying ICE vehicles by then may be niche customers or holdouts. You'll still see gas cars on the road for years after that, but they may already be the exceptions by that point.
I see it as a snowball effect. Right now we're in this awkward early phase where most EVs are still expensive and the infrastructure is still limited, but there's going to be a point in a few years where you suddenly find that $25,000 EVs are a practical reality and the charging networks are considerably better. And from there, adoption could accelerate.
I wouldn't say the end is coming in 10 years. But when GM plans to stop selling gas cars by 2035 and other brands are likely to follow suit, there could be a culture change in the next several years. When brands stop selling new gas cars, the technology will have already been on the decline for years — the only people still buying ICE vehicles by then may be niche customers or holdouts. You'll still see gas cars on the road for years after that, but they may already be the exceptions by that point.