Quote from: etotheipi on November 18, 2024, 15:20:05Lucky for you, you have also been saving on road taxes.
That's coming to an end
Sorry you believed there was such a thing as free lunch.
Wisconsin already had a road tax for EVs in form of annual fee for EVs. So unlike gas cars, even if you don't drive at all you had to pay an extra fee. Now they are putting another tax on EVs in the form of charging. Nobody is saying that EVs should avoid road taxes, but the taxes should be fair.
Quote from: Ji on November 18, 2024, 15:26:58The economics of EVs have always been a massively subsidized bubble. I cannot see any massive breakthroughs in the next decade that will justify this spending spree. The roads are just one of the infrastructures affected by EVs, buy also electrical grid. We have not done much for the latter either, just wait until more taxes come down the line for EV-related grid charges.
What nonsense are you talking about? The breakthrough that makes EV viable already happened, first one was around half a century ago when transistor was invented, and second one was when the lithium ion battery was commercialized in 1991. From then on, all EVs needed were incremental improvements and economies of scale.
The US federal tax credit is centered around building out US manufacturing, unless you want to see the US car industry collapse and all go to China. The tax credits require a % of local mining and manufacturing, and the % goes up every year forcing domestic production.
As for the grid, a lot has been done to improve the grid. That said, adoption of EVs actually make the grid cheaper to run.