5 thoughts on “Poll: US Voters Support Full Transition to Electric Cars by 2030”
This kind of seems like they polled the choir if they like to sing.
The thing about the change to EVs is that climate change is a bad sell. It’s already got the people who find that a good motivation. They are already on board.
To get more folks, you have to make a different argument. All of the ones presented there (individual health, etc) are a little abstract on how they relate to the individual person.
Dollars wins this. Performance wins this. Assuaging fears of infrastructure and charging times wins this. The environmental change is almost a byproduct.
If not, good luck with that around the edges. And even more good luck with getting a fully robust reliable infrastructure network, with adequate redundancy and zero gaps, by 2030. You’re going to need it.
Looking at the list of states, they’re either around 50/50 politically or lean more democratic. If you started to factor in the Alabama, Mississippi, Indiana like states, I think you’d see that overall result change dramatically.
This kind of seems like they polled the choir if they like to sing.
The thing about the change to EVs is that climate change is a bad sell. It’s already got the people who find that a good motivation. They are already on board.
To get more folks, you have to make a different argument. All of the ones presented there (individual health, etc) are a little abstract on how they relate to the individual person.
Dollars wins this. Performance wins this. Assuaging fears of infrastructure and charging times wins this. The environmental change is almost a byproduct.
If ‘electric cars’ includes PHEVs, why not 2025?
If not, good luck with that around the edges. And even more good luck with getting a fully robust reliable infrastructure network, with adequate redundancy and zero gaps, by 2030. You’re going to need it.
#GreenNewDeal
Weird, I don’t see the Dakotas on the list….
Looking at the list of states, they’re either around 50/50 politically or lean more democratic. If you started to factor in the Alabama, Mississippi, Indiana like states, I think you’d see that overall result change dramatically.