In other words, you admit there are none.
Serious question, do you have any idea how much our government has spent in total on EVs so far? I couldn't find any comprehensive totals to date of all the subsidies, tax breaks, research funding, etc pertaining to EVs, their components and their needed infrastructure. It appears the subsides/handouts/funding started over
45 years ago in 1976 with HR 8800 allocating $160 million (that's $750 mil in today's dollars) for EV research and limited production. 2009 was a big year when $2.4 billion ($3.11 billion in today's dollars) in funding was announced. GM and Tesla have hit the 200,000 vehicle cap. If only half of those EV buyers took the tax credit that's another $1.5 billion. I think we'd all be shocked at the number if all the government tax dollars spent on EVs over all the years were totaled up.
Here in Michigan several years ago the feds and state government tossed $1.4 billion at four EV battery companies, which all declared bankruptcy. And that points out another form of subsidy or cost that goes uncounted in this push for EVs: the costs to all the businesses that get shafted when these subsidized companies go bankrupt. I've witnessed this harm with the ongoing renewable fuels debacle and many businesses, including mom and pop size ones, get harmed by these bankruptcies.
If anyone knows a good source for finding the total amount the government has spend over the years on EVs, please share!
I'm not anti EV, but let's be honest about them, honest about their true costs and honest about the likely consequences of their wide spread adoption. I could see getting one for commuting, though by the time used ones are affordable, proven to handle corrosion in the rust belt, proven to not be fire hazards (sort of kidding) and shown to not be money pits, my commuting days will likely be over. And for how often the power goes out in my neighborhood, I will always have non electric fueled vehicle as a backup.