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Page added on October 11, 2012

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Why You Don’t Want an Electric Car…Yet

Consumption

In a recent New York Times Magazine article, “Why Your Car Isn’t Electric,” Maggie Koerth-Baker works through why consumers prefer gas cars over electric vehicles (EVs). She finds that Americans aren’t flocking to EVs because they have a fundamentally different idea of what a car should be. Consumers want vehicles that perform (and cost) like the gas cars they’ve grown accustomed to over the last century. Until EVs meet these performance and cost expectations, consumers will continue to purchase gas cars. Yet, to-date America’s dominant climate and energy policy approaches fail to aggressively address these barriers, instead focusing on deploying today’s uncompetitive EVs. Electrifying America’s transportation fleet requires throwing away these tried-and-failed approaches and instead focusing on innovating better and cheaper electric cars.

In Shifting Gears: Transcending Conventional Economic Doctrines to Develop Better Electric Vehicle Batteries, ITIF takes an in-depth look at how the two default climate and energy policy approaches – informed by neo-Keynesian and neoclassical economic doctrines – have failed to spur the adoption of EVs.

On the one hand, neo-Keynesian economic thinking holds that demand drives economic growth (and innovation). Under such thinking, if companies believe consumer demand for electric vehicles is increasing, they will invest in better EV technologies to produce innovations that meet consumer expectations. Thus, the neo-Keynesian policy of choice has been to subsidize consumer purchases of EVs to boost demand. And it’s a policy that is on the books in America today: consumers can benefit from a $7,500 federal tax break for buying qualifying EVs, as well as a smattering of state incentives.

On the other hand, the neoclassical economic doctrine holds that economic growth (and innovation) is primarily the result of the efficient allocation of resources. In other words, the economy can be viewed as a large market of goods and services that is generally in equilibrium. Under this doctrine, in cases where the market is not in equilibrium – for example, when the societal costs of emitting greenhouse gases (GHGs) are not internalized – government should work to account for those externalities. The most prominent solution to internalize the cost of GHGs is a carbon price. In the case of the transportation sector, neoclassicalists assume that if drivers pay the full cost of burning gasoline, including the cost of pollution and climate change, EVs will become cost-competitive with gas cars and their adoption will dramatically increase. Good examples of such policies are those on the books in many European countries, which through a combination of fuel taxes and carbon pricing schemes, have increased the price of gasoline to $8 to $9 per gallon, while the United States continues to pay around $3 to $4 per gallon.

Yet both approaches have completely failed at spurring a robust EV market. In the United States, EVs make less than a blip in vehicle sales. In total, 286,371 EVs – including hybrids, plug-in hybrids, and battery electric vehicles – were sold in 2011 in the United States, a market share of new sales little more than two percent. Technology Review reports that the nation’s EV battery factories are sitting idle or operating well below their intended capacity.

Even more telling, Reuters reported in September 2012 that Toyota “scrapped plans for widespread sales of a new all-electric minicar, saying it had misread the market and the ability of still-emerging battery technology to meet consumer demands.” Company Vice Chairman Takeshi Uchiyamada observed, “The current capabilities of electric vehicles do not meet society’s needs, whether it may be the distance the cars can run, or the costs, or how it takes a long time to charge.”

Europe is grappling with the same problems. Even though 17 of the 27 European Union countries employed a carbon-related tax on gasoline cars as of 2011 and many countries implement EV subsidies, sales have remained sluggish. Since early 2011, Nissan sold 11,000 battery-electric Leafs in the United States, but only 3,000 in Europe. “European newsletter Automotive Industry Data (AID) said that despite meaty government subsidies, electric cars managed a market share of 0.09 percent in Western Europe last year,” reports The Detroit News. The situation is particularly dire in Portugal, which offers not only direct purchase subsidies, but also income tax relief of up to 30 percent for electric vehicle buyers. Portugal’s Secretary of State for Public Works, Transport and Communications Sergio Monteiro laments, “The average cost [of an EV] is around [$45,000 USD] in Portugal, and we have a reduction of [more than $6,200 USD] subsidized by the state. We only managed to sell 200 vehicles [in 2011].”

None of this should be surprising. As indicated by Koerth-Baker in her NYT Magazine piece, what’s holding back EV adoption is a lack of both cost and performance competitiveness relative to conventional gas cars. EVs can cost substantially more than gas cars, even when considering lifetime operating costs. And the performance of today’s EVs can also be underwhelming. Whereas gas cars can travel more than 300 miles between refueling, today’s EV batteries have a range of less than 100 miles per charge, have difficulty operating in very hot and very cold conditions, and can take anywhere from 30 minutes to 20 hours to fully refuel, depending on the re-charging technology.

The problems hampering EV adoption can be solved, but only if policymakers and advocates stop looking to the neoclassical and neo-Keynesian economic doctrines as the North Star guide to climate and energy policy. Instead, the emerging field of “innovation economics” offers guidance on how policy can spur the development of the kinds of breakthrough technologies that will make EVs and other clean technologies viable. In that vein, Shifting Gears lays out a series of steps that the federal government can and should take to encourage EV innovation. This includes:

  1. More aggressively funding battery innovation, possibly by diverting funds used for the EV tax credit to instead support key battery innovation programs, like the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy’s (ARPA-E) Batteries for Electrical Energy Storage in Transportation (BEEST) program as well as the National Labs.
  2. Fostering greater collaboration between the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Department of Energy (DOE) on battery development to create an early market for emerging battery designs and chemistries.
  3. Supporting the creation of a “Battery Shot Initiative” akin to DOE’s SunShot Initiative to coordinate government battery RD&D with the goal of producing a battery with a total system cost of less than $100/kWh and a range of at least 300 miles per charge.

If the world is to substantially reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the transportation sector, EVs must become the vehicle of choice for consumers everywhere. The most important step, however, is greater innovation to create electric cars that they actually want to buy and drive.

Energy Collective



9 Comments on "Why You Don’t Want an Electric Car…Yet"

  1. BillT on Thu, 11th Oct 2012 12:08 pm 

    Haha. Too late! There is no time to rebuild a system that took 100 years to be what it is today. There are 200 million plus cars in the Us and most are still being paid for out of shrinking incomes. So, it takes at least 10-15 years to turn over that fleet. By then, cars will be gone except for the wealthy.

    High initital cost, low or no trade-in value, very expensive battery replacement, probably before the car is worn out. Shrinking economy and incomes. All of these are against the electric ever being popular. No, gas will continue until any type of private vehicles are too expensive to operate and the last one has to be drug to the junk yard from where ever it quits. Or just abandoned. I give it until 2030 max.

  2. Norm on Thu, 11th Oct 2012 1:43 pm 

    The peak oil website wont run worth beans anymore. its too slow. who owns it, whats the problem?
    *****

    Hey peak oil friends, remember that after peak oil, there wont be any medical care anymore.

    This is why i want you to read an article i wrote,
    http://koshkadrook.wordpress.com/2012/09/18/never-stand-on-a-5-gallon-bucket/

    So stay safe, wishing you well.

  3. Arthur on Thu, 11th Oct 2012 3:32 pm 

    We might consider buying an electrical car, provided we have a new post-carbon energy base that for the full 100% is able not just to fuel these vehicles but also is able to produce them… which is not going to happen in hundred years.

  4. Beery on Thu, 11th Oct 2012 3:44 pm 

    Why would any sane person ever buy an electric car? They are not a solution – if anything, they make our problems worse. Electric cars run primarily on coal. Coal mining and combustion creates even more environmental problems than oil ever did. Saying that electric cars are an environmentally friendly choice compared with gasoline powered cars is like saying that contracting AIDS is healthier than getting the common cold.

  5. Plantagenet on Thu, 11th Oct 2012 3:51 pm 

    Why spend twice as much on an EV that is half as good as a normal car?

  6. DC on Thu, 11th Oct 2012 3:55 pm 

    Q/Consumers want vehicles that perform (and cost) like the gas cars they’ve grown accustomed to over the last century.

    This guy clearly believes in the myth of consumer sovereignty. The auto-oil car-tel never arose, or based its ‘products’ or how they would utilized based on anything ‘consumers’ wanted. Car-dependency was imposed top-down by corporate dicate, not bottom-up. So to assume that we dont have EVs because ‘consumers’ are not demanding them, is completely false. To assume that is too assume the ‘market’ actually operates in response to anything resembling genuine demand. It does nothing of the sort. The market is rigged, and few have been rigged more thoroughly than our dependency on the gas-powered car.

    And no one spazz about If I think EVs are a good idea or not. Thats beside the point really. I for one, never demanded gas-burning cars, and Im not exactly clamoring for EVs either. Not because EVs are ‘bad’ per se, they have a number of virtues over there gas-burning garbage boxes. Sadly tho, EVs as currently promoted, are status-quo extenders, designed to keep toxic suburban spawl a going concern.(its hoped anyhow).

    His closing idea is can be summed up this way, EVs will reduce GHG. Well, Its pretty clear he hasnt thought that idea through. Over 90% of the electrical energy we produce on this planet is done through dirty fossil-fuels or dams, which dont pollute, but are not exactly problem-free either. But looking at that dirty 90%, his conclusion that EVs will clean up cars mess is questionable right off. The few % of global energy thats produced cleanly, is nowhere near sufficient to power more than a few EVs. That energy is being used for other purposes, there is no surplus of clean electricity for a billion EVs. The only thing capable of cleaning up the cars mess,are electric trains, trams, E-buses, and bikes. But I see none of those got any mention whatso-ever in his article.

  7. rollin on Thu, 11th Oct 2012 5:23 pm 

    If three people commute to work together in a high mpg car, it is much more efficient than any train and costs nothing to implement, in fact it saves money. If people would do everything they can to reduce the use of their cars and use them wisely, personal transportion use of petroleum would drop to about 30%. If they want to not have economic and fuel crises in the near future, maybe they should act differently. Better future technology is nice but acting responsible and wisely happens now and saves both enerby and money.

  8. Arthur on Thu, 11th Oct 2012 8:26 pm 

    “If three people commute to work together in a high mpg car, it is much more efficient than any train and costs nothing to implement, in fact it saves money.”

    And it is so easy to make it work and match demand & supply of shared miles with all these location aware smart phones around.

  9. GregT on Fri, 12th Oct 2012 12:20 am 

    Google “Jevon’s Paradox” to answer the question as to why increased efficiencies will do nothing to solve our current problems.

    The future will eventually resemble something like the past, pre-oil. Except that there will be far more mouths to feed, on a planet that will not be anywhere near as supportive.

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