The ev is extremely cost effective in my use case. That’s why I own it. When I bought my first ev, I was burning through $600 month in fuel at $1.20/L. Energy cost went down to $50/month ($0.12/kWh).
If the grid goes down I won’t need it. If the grid goes down gas/diesel is going to get just as sparse as electricity.
So, not a valid point. Both cases can be solved with storage and means of production. I know how to make biodiesel. I wouldn’t mind solar but it’s not economical here.
Drive my truck?
The ev is extremely cost effective in my use case. That’s why I own it. When I bought my first ev, I was burning through $600 month in fuel at $1.20/L. Energy cost went down to $50/month ($0.12/kWh).
Still doesn't answer what are you going to do when the grid goes down? When it does, how are you going to charge it?
If the grid goes down I won’t need it. If the grid goes down gas/diesel is going to get just as sparse as electricity.
So, not a valid point. Both cases can be solved with storage and means of production. I know how to make biodiesel. I wouldn’t mind solar but it’s not economical here.