We are starting to get
data of the population of electric cars pout there to guide the rising build
out that is inevitable. Present
constraints are all about range and weak infrastructure which will change out
fast enough.
In the end, we will need
a 1000 mile battery lightly loaded dropping to 600 miles heavily loaded. This provides the energy for fast travel as
well and we are not there yet.
However we are climbing
from one percent to two percent this year and those are numbers that allows
everyone to see one and drive it if he wishes.
Thus remaining customer resistance is easily dealt with.
Who Drives Electric
Cars?
September 23, 2013, 12:25 a.m. ET
Electric
cars are still such a novelty that little is known about their owners and how
they use the vehicles. But recent research is beginning to unlock some of the
mysteries.
Plug-in
vehicles—those that run entirely on battery power or that combine electric and
gasoline drives—represent less than 1% of total U.S. vehicle sales, but in
the past three years their numbers have grown rapidly. Sales nearly tripled in
2012 and are on track to nearly double this year, according to the Electric
Drive Transportation Association, a trade group.
Since
2009, the EV Project—financed with grants from the U.S. Energy Department and
operated by Ecotality Inc., ECTY -4.67% a
maker of electric charging stations—has been collecting and analyzing data from
more than 8,000 drivers of electric vehicles.
Among
the findings: Owners of electric cars drive less, possibly because they are
using electric vehicles primarily for short trips, to work or the grocery. Or
it may be that they fear running out of juice. A separate survey found that
limited range caused many EV owners to avoid longer or discretionary trips—to
the movie theater or to visit friends, for instance.
The
EV Project's data also shows that buyers of plug-in vehicles are relatively
more affluent than the average motorist. That reflects the cost of the
vehicles: General Motors Co.'s gas-and-electric Chevrolet Volt costs around
$40,000, while the all-electric Nissan Leaf sells for about $30,000. Owners are
also more likely to be "greener"—a large portion of electric-car
buyers report having solar panels.
The
results are important for the utilities that build, maintain and operate the
power grid. EV Project data show that owners of
electric vehicles tend to cluster in the same neighborhoods and plug in at
similar times—usually in the evening. This can increase the load on a single
transformer significantly, and lead to the equipment aging more quickly, as
well as to power outages.
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