https://www.stuff.co.nz/motoring/EVs/119339212/the-questions-owners-of-electric-vehicles-get-asked
The questions owners of electric vehicles get asked
Feb 08 2020  Matt Lawrey

[image  
https://resources.stuff.co.nz/content/dam/images/1/z/1/w/o/6/image.related.StuffLandscapeSixteenByNine.1240x700.1z1uq4.png/1581133749961.jpg
Matt Lawrey at the wheel of his Nissan Leaf electric vehicle
  / Darcy Lawrey


video  flash
]

OPINION: One of the first things you learn when you buy an electric vehicle
is how little a lot of people actually know about electric vehicles.

I couldn't wait to get my hands on one. Our old car was on its last legs
and, the more I learnt about climate change, the more I wanted to embrace
emissions-free motoring. After being given a long list of demands, The Car
Company produced exactly the kind of Nissan Leaf we'd been after and the
deal was done. Reactions from friends, family and strangers have been a
mixture of fascination and mild suspicion. Top of people's minds have been
the questions: how do you charge it and how far will it go on a full 'tank'?

Six months after going electric, people are still surprised when I tell them
that we charge our car one or two nights a week at home with a standard
power point and that a full tank costs about $7. The tradition of filling up
at gas stations combined with the arrival of publicly available fast
chargers appears to have led many people to assume that EVs require
something resembling a petrol pump. The truth is, unless you're going on a
long trip, you may never need one.

The next question, invariably, is about range. Here's how it basically
works: the more you pay for an EV, the greater its range. In New Zealand you
can buy an older Leaf for around $10,000 and get a range of maybe 90 kms or
you can spend 15 times that much and get a Telsa that will go 600km. There
is, of course, an increasing range of options in between ...

Our Leaf will go around 185km which means we can take it to Lake Rotoiti and
Golden Bay [
https://www.google.com/search?q=distance+Lake+Rotoiti+to+Golden+Bay+nz
] and, on those rare occasions we need to drive further, we can take our
time and use the high speed charger network or borrow a friend's car or hire
one with the money we save from not paying for petrol.

I know it sounds strange but the whole never-paying-for-petrol thing and its
significance takes a while to get your head around. In simple terms, the
world of the internal combustion engine is one where pretty much everyone is
addicted to oil and dependent on multinationals for their expensive and
regular fix. Breaking that addiction feels good. Not having to watch that
addiction eat up a significant chunk of your income also feels nice.

I'll tell you what else feels good; driving an EV. Ask anyone who owns one
and they'll tell you the same thing: EVs are fast, smooth and fun. In fact,
they're so fast, smooth and fun, they leave most conventional cars feeling
like wheezy, rattly, old tractors.

Another common question people have is: how long does it take to charge an
EV? To be honest, it's not something EV owners spend a lot of time thinking
about. You plug them in at night and in the morning they are fully charged
and good to go.

If you do get caught short or you're on a long trip, you can always use
those fast chargers. It takes 30 to 40 minutes to charge our car on them and
it costs less than $10.

Downsides? Honestly, not a lot if you get the right EV for your driving
needs. The biggest is possibly that some of them aren't great for towing. In
fact, we were told "no towing" when we bought ours; apparently the Leaf's
engine doesn't like towing. Apart from that it's pretty much all smooth,
virtually maintenance-free, sailing.

So why isn't everyone driving an EV? Partly it's the fear of the unknown,
partly it's cost and I suspect it's partly because there are still
infinitely more reasons for the motoring and petroleum industries to keep
pushing the old climate-killing, fossil fuel industry-enabling internal
combustion engine than the proven electric alternative.

When you consider the threat that EVs pose to the oil industry and much of
the car industry's historic investment, it's no wonder the promotion of the
vehicles is muted at best. I also can't help wondering whether vested
interests might also be behind some of the negativity you hear about them.

I'm not saying concerns about where the lithium that goes into the batteries
comes from or how we deal with old batteries aren't valid but, the way I see
it, the path that EVs offer has to be better than continuing to kill the
planet by digging up and burning dinosaur juice.

It also feels good to be part of the transition from an old polluting
technology to a more environmentally friendly one. So, if you're thinking
about a new car this year, I'd really encourage you consider an EV.
[© stuff.co.nz]


+
https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/119233324/electric-motorcycle-moped-numbers-double-on-nz-roads-in-five-years
Electric motorcycle, moped numbers double on NZ roads in five years
Feb 09 2020  There are now 422 electric motorcycles and mopeds with an
active vehicle licence on New Zealand roads ... e-moped ride-sharing service
Kwikli launched in Auckland NZ in 2018 ...
https://resources.stuff.co.nz/content/dam/images/1/s/m/l/k/v/image.related.StuffLandscapeSixteenByNine.1240x700.1yzl0s.png/1581194895637.jpg




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