OP
Gale Hawkins
Super Member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2009
- Messages
- 8,268
- Location
- Murray, KY
- Tractor
- 1948 Allis Chambers Model B 1976 265 MF / 1983 JD 310B Backhoe / 1966 Ford 3000 Diesel / 1980 3600 Diesel
Climate change policies are going to be costly, says U.N.-backed report
I am starting to see the EV is caught in the cross fire of opinions about the future.
In our case I was going for an upgraded vehicle as far as features goes and that produced less heat after this last summer.
While the 2016 Nissan Leaf is the nicest car we have ever owned and the newest one since the 1973 Nissan that cost $2150 new. The heat pump really does add comfort on cold mornings. Doing the gas station thing was not that bad time wise but it is cheaper to just plug it at night. What I really late is the oil changing places so skipping them is an EV plus for me. The biggy is I Do Not want to go back to driving ICE vehicles after just 8 weeks with the Leaf. 9 weeks ago I would have never through that would happen. The 4 camera vision really helps in parking lots.
I am not convinced we will save any whales or polar bears but they never was on my mind. As some of the comments to the above article points out we are going to kill some industries and build other industries. In our case we just need to be able to make two 30 mile trips a day for the next four years based on current plans and the Leaf seems to be a good fit for us.
For business road trips we have rented for years instead of driving personal ICE vehicles even though that we own 3 currently so that is an option we can do personally should we not own an ICE powered vehicle some day but I do not see that some day coming for many years if every unless fuel becomes the high price in some countries today.
Regardless how ones makes a vehicle move down the road there is going to be an energy cost period.
I am impressed by companies like Nissan and Tesla that have been working against great odds and gaining ground for the EV idea that is over 100 years old. I was watching a Youtube video about the Nissan Leafs in Australia and he was mentioned how far they have to drive and the lack of charging points in open country.
I read where there are 600,000 EV's in CA currently and wonder why we only have 6 in the state of KY.
A serious concern that I have is covered in the story below.
Electric cars are clean, but can they be profitable? New report casts doubt
After reading about the recent GM strike I can see the USA losing its auto manufacturing down the road. If by 2050 50% of all new car and trucks are EV's I can see 90% of them coming from China.
Payne: UAW-GM fight exposes fears of an EV future
I am starting to see the EV is caught in the cross fire of opinions about the future.
In our case I was going for an upgraded vehicle as far as features goes and that produced less heat after this last summer.
While the 2016 Nissan Leaf is the nicest car we have ever owned and the newest one since the 1973 Nissan that cost $2150 new. The heat pump really does add comfort on cold mornings. Doing the gas station thing was not that bad time wise but it is cheaper to just plug it at night. What I really late is the oil changing places so skipping them is an EV plus for me. The biggy is I Do Not want to go back to driving ICE vehicles after just 8 weeks with the Leaf. 9 weeks ago I would have never through that would happen. The 4 camera vision really helps in parking lots.
I am not convinced we will save any whales or polar bears but they never was on my mind. As some of the comments to the above article points out we are going to kill some industries and build other industries. In our case we just need to be able to make two 30 mile trips a day for the next four years based on current plans and the Leaf seems to be a good fit for us.
For business road trips we have rented for years instead of driving personal ICE vehicles even though that we own 3 currently so that is an option we can do personally should we not own an ICE powered vehicle some day but I do not see that some day coming for many years if every unless fuel becomes the high price in some countries today.
Regardless how ones makes a vehicle move down the road there is going to be an energy cost period.
I am impressed by companies like Nissan and Tesla that have been working against great odds and gaining ground for the EV idea that is over 100 years old. I was watching a Youtube video about the Nissan Leafs in Australia and he was mentioned how far they have to drive and the lack of charging points in open country.
I read where there are 600,000 EV's in CA currently and wonder why we only have 6 in the state of KY.
A serious concern that I have is covered in the story below.
Electric cars are clean, but can they be profitable? New report casts doubt
After reading about the recent GM strike I can see the USA losing its auto manufacturing down the road. If by 2050 50% of all new car and trucks are EV's I can see 90% of them coming from China.
Payne: UAW-GM fight exposes fears of an EV future