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@Setok @sleepy62 @mhoye it depends on the country. in #Germany, there're periodic house renovation requirements, so houses have modern electrical wiring capable of 11kw charging units without permission. but if you want 22kw unit, you have to get a permission from grid operators to ensure that 1) your house wiring can handle, 2) the grid itself can handle the load. then you have the issue with weight of EV vs ICE and the impact of that on certain infrastructure like bridges and old roads ...etc @hszakher @sleepy62 @mhoye most people overestimate their charging needs. We went months with two EVs and just regular suko plugs. Very rarely was that not enough to be fully charged in the morning (most people don’t drive to empty every day). From what I read, the impact of weight increase is quite minimal in general but there may be some car parks that need to consider. @sleepy62 @Setok @mhoye speaking of fuel lobby, this is just in https://www.tagesschau.de/wirtschaft/verbraucher/diesel-hvo100-tankstellen-100.html @hszakher @sleepy62 @mhoye I'd argue the legislation should be worded to not specify technology, just that it most be CO2 neutral. How it achieves that doesn't really matter. Though perhaps that is how it's worded, I'm not sure. Though EVs do have benefits beyond that which I personally wouldn't want to give up. |
@hszakher @Setok @mhoye Cant help thinking that our good friends in the powerful fossil fuel lobby are doing whatever they can to sew FUD about EVs. In Canada we saw an uptick in EV FUD articles in the press after the Feds introduces the 2035 targets.