DieselBound
Elite Member
This is what I think is the biggest indicator for whether a viable electric tractor can be brought to market as a reasonable/attractive alternative to diesel.
Total tractor sales in 2019 (USA): ~250,000
Total passenger vehicle sales in 2019 (USA): ~17,000,000
So, ~70 times as many vehicles sold.
Unfortunately, I think the tractor market is just too small to warrant the development costs needed to put a reliable, electric tractor into production at a reasonable cost.
As much as I think it is a good idea, I think the economics of the situation dictate that they will only become a financially sustainable and reasonable alternative when they can capitalize on the technology/supply chains/etc. developed from cars.
It can easily be argued that cars aren't even an economical alternative yet. Consequently, I think electric tractors are still years (decades) away from gaining any traction (pun intended) in the market.
Yes, you've described the conundrum well. Economies of scale is going to be incredibly hard: I'm of the belief, based on world economic situation, planet carrying capacity (resources), that we'll never see any mass-marketed electric tractors; there's a possibility that there could be a handful of mega Ag operations running with electric machines (perhaps more along the lines of electric trolley systems- pulling power off of overhead lines), but I'm thinking that that kind of future is going to be a bit dystopian (security to ensure operations aren't disturbed is going to have to be incredibly high [food sources would likely be run by fewer and fewer entities, perhaps even ending up controlled by a single body]).
Higher power demand is going to be a step up from automotive demands, so expect some hurdles here that the engineers of automotive systems won't have (they'll have it, but at a much easier to work with scale). But, again, it's economies of scale that we have to focus on as the stumbling block: cost per unit. Still not addressed in this mix is rail and water transport (I'm assuming that if we can power tractors via electricity that we'd be able to do so for over-the-road transport): the more fossil fuels are cut back the more expensive fuel for those applications will be (and you can apply this to plastics, road construction and on an on...).