srobak
Former 2015 G80 owner - soon to be G90?
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2015
- Messages
- 1,709
- Reaction score
- 352
- Points
- 83
- Location
- Packerland
- Genesis Model Type
- 2G Genesis Sedan (2015-2016)
You keep telling yourself that.
The demand is way down from 6, 12 and 18 months ago. This is indisputable - even by you. Even with the insanely massive rebates being served on the silver platters they are - people just aren't buying them as much as they were when they were first being told that the sky was falling and that they had to and the downward trend is continuing. Used values have fallen through the floor as well - as another user has posted - and those aren't being scooped up, either. Until ranges and cold-weather performance take a significant increase and pricing takes a significant decrease - there will not be widespread adoption and it will remain niche - regardless what regulators want to do. We also need to have started building nuke plants again 5 years ago to support that kind of adoption.
If you saw my re-hi thread in the lounge you will note that we took out an EV9 for an extended test not too long ago. It checked the boxes in many respects - and certainly gave big smiles in sport mode. But the most important box it could not check was range. It could have come dripped in gold - but without decent range it is a non-starter. Especially since it was quite enjoyable to drive - which would just make piling the miles on that much easier. There is no excuse for a vehicle that large to have such a short range - especially when something like the Lucid Air can approach 400 miles while lighting the pavement ablaze. Consequently - we got the Palisade Calligraphy - essentially a GV80 in different clothing, and with a lot more money left in the bank. We will see where things stand on the EV & infrastructure front in another 5 years or so... but I am not holding my breath.
Both in the UK and Europe ever increasing legislation leading to a total ban for new ICE cars, dictates where the future is going.
They tried that here in the states. It isn't just limited to EVs, either. It's on just about everything. So many do-gooder legislative initiatives have backfired so spectacularly at local, state and federal levels with the end result being a walking-back or even complete reversals over the past 5 years it will make your head spin. The harshness of reality often sets in on these (often whackadoo) pie-in-the-sky policies after a few years when the net effect is actually observed - and it drops a big, fat egg on the faces of those who shove the policies down the public's throat. Of course by then they have somehow managed to seal their place in the elite stronghold and it requires a massive, public upheaval and legal action in order to usurp those folks from their platinum pedestals. Either way - there is more often than not a reversal, softening, outright ignoring of, or consciously not enforcing of such policies and laws.
Personally - I think the rampant adoption and throat-ramming of these types of legislation and policies needs to go through a gate-kept, research trial via practical application testing before it goes into production. No more theory and whiteboarding while promising unicorns and rainbows supported by nothing more than outsourced marketing consultancy fees and bills which is then pushed onto the 6 o-clock news like it was gospel. Build a practical, real-world utilization based test environment, deploy, monitor and record the statistics and impact over a period of 3 to 5 years. If it can't pass the requirements, meet the expectations and promises - then it gets rejected. Back to the drawing board - this time armed with real-world data - and try again. This approach would have saved so much time, effort, energy and lives over the past 5-10 years - and runs the gamut from EVs to criminal justice reform to decriminalization of drugs, to taxes, to medical coverage, to veteran's benefits, to homeless, to employment, to vaccines, to immigration, to gas furnaces, to light bulbs (remember CFLs?), to bottled water to offshoring, to killing nuke plants, to demilitarization, to.... the list endlessly goes on. As a country - our politicians like to test on the live environment, rather than in an isolated instance & far away from those it would have the most negative impact on if it fails. More often than not - it does, and people end up hurt or otherwise paying the price as a result. That crap needs to stop. But that's for another thread.
My point is - no matter how aggressive your politicians might be with some of this stuff - reality will rear it's head in time - and just like here you will see a softening or walking back on some of it to varying degrees. There literally isn't another possible outcome.

