Getbig.com: American Bodybuilding, Fitness and Figure
Getbig Main Boards => Politics and Political Issues Board => Topic started by: IroNat on February 05, 2023, 05:34:20 AM
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https://finance.yahoo.com/news/electric-shock-study-found-evs-150000536.html
According to a new study from the Anderson Economic Group, rising electricity prices — combined with softer gas prices — made EVs more expensive to fuel than gas-powered cars at the end of 2022.
“In Q4 2022, typical mid-priced ICE car drivers paid about $11.29 to fuel their vehicles for 100 miles of driving,” the study says. “That cost was around $0.31 cheaper than the amount paid by mid-priced EV drivers charging mostly at home, and over $3 less than the cost borne by comparable EV drivers charging commercially.”
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https://finance.yahoo.com/news/electric-shock-study-found-evs-150000536.html
According to a new study from the Anderson Economic Group, rising electricity prices — combined with softer gas prices — made EVs more expensive to fuel than gas-powered cars at the end of 2022.
“In Q4 2022, typical mid-priced ICE car drivers paid about $11.29 to fuel their vehicles for 100 miles of driving,” the study says. “That cost was around $0.31 cheaper than the amount paid by mid-priced EV drivers charging mostly at home, and over $3 less than the cost borne by comparable EV drivers charging commercially.”
Environmentalists are so full of crap.
Repost along the same lines:
According to a report in the Telegraph on Saturday, the country is considering emergency measures in case of an electricity supply shortage this winter.
Switzerland — the best country in the world according to a recent analysis from US News & World Report — could shorten store operating hours, lower the thermostats at buildings, and limit the private use of electric cars to “absolutely necessary journeys.”
These proposed measures haven’t been passed into law just yet. But they serve as a reminder that electricity doesn’t magically appear at every wall outlet — and EVs don’t run on fairy dust.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/winter-coming-best-country-world-230000360.html
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Environmentalists are so full of crap.
Repost along the same lines:
According to a report in the Telegraph on Saturday, the country is considering emergency measures in case of an electricity supply shortage this winter.
Switzerland — the best country in the world according to a recent analysis from US News & World Report — could shorten store operating hours, lower the thermostats at buildings, and limit the private use of electric cars to “absolutely necessary journeys.”
These proposed measures haven’t been passed into law just yet. But they serve as a reminder that electricity doesn’t magically appear at every wall outlet — and EVs don’t run on fairy dust.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/winter-coming-best-country-world-230000360.html
Yup ^^
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Saw an article with a line of electric cars waiting from Baker, Ca few days ago. There's not enough infrastructure to support the push that the government is trying to force on us. Thanks demoncrats. ::)
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https://finance.yahoo.com/news/electric-shock-study-found-evs-150000536.html
According to a new study from the Anderson Economic Group, rising electricity prices — combined with softer gas prices — made EVs more expensive to fuel than gas-powered cars at the end of 2022.
“In Q4 2022, typical mid-priced ICE car drivers paid about $11.29 to fuel their vehicles for 100 miles of driving,” the study says. “That cost was around $0.31 cheaper than the amount paid by mid-priced EV drivers charging mostly at home, and over $3 less than the cost borne by comparable EV drivers charging commercially.”
-Not considering an EV at this point in time because I drive too few miles for it to make financial sense, (40 miles in the last 2 weeks). My car averages about 28 miles per gal, mostly city driving. Local gas at Chevron is under $4.00 a gallon so spent less than $6.00 for gas in the last two weeks. I have clear title to it. It has less than 33,000. miles so major repairs/maintenance is not likely. Last I checked Kelly Blue Book, it was valued at around $20,000. The average new EV is around $50,000. On average, it runs .05 per mile to drive a Tesla (.05 X 40 mi = $2.00). Clearly is not enough of a savings in my case to warrant replacing my current gasoline engine vehicle.
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-Not considering an EV at this point in time because I drive too few miles for it to make financial sense, (40 miles in the last 2 weeks). My car averages about 28 miles per gal, mostly city driving. Local gas at Chevron is under $4.00 a gallon so spent less than $6.00 for gas in the last two weeks. I have clear title to it. It has less than 33,000. miles so major repairs/maintenance is not likely. Last I checked Kelly Blue Book, it was valued at around $20,000. The average new EV is around $50,000. On average, it runs .05 per mile to drive a Tesla (.05 X 40 mi = $2.00). Clearly is not enough of a savings in my case to warrant replacing my current gasoline engine vehicle.
Plus you're pretty old, won't be driving yourself around much longer.