Somenewguy
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Not just boats, people towing anything, which is a lot, severely limits battery range. Forget stopping to pump gas real quick, you’re waiting AT LEAST 10-15 mins for a partial charge. Forget cold weather performance, we all already know how that impacts batteries, running your heater plays into this as well as electric heater technology in general draws a lot of amps. Forget the cost of a battery replacement, that’s like replacing a gas engine times 3. Also, say a natural disaster happens nearby and wipes out commercial power, no local charging for you. (I bring that one up because I’ve seen gas storage tanks plumbed for manual pumping after a bad tornado)
All in all we are witnessing a time where we’re trying to push something so hard to the masses but the engineering and technology isn’t there yet. EVs theoretically are cool and have performance advantages, but are pretty impractical in the grand scheme of things. Not to mention our infrastructure is nowhere near ready for something like this. Maybe in 10-15 years.
I'm not saying EVs are perfect, but I would challenge you to think of your argument in reverse.
The technology and engineering to burn fossil fuels for a billion personal vehicles without destroying the environment just isn't there yet. There is no infrastructure to scrub the amount of greenhouse gasses emitted by ICE vehicles. These global impacts are a lot bigger than you not being able to tow your boat to the lake twice a year.
Will driving an electric car reverse global warming? No. But it will clean up our air, reduce dependence on middle east oil, and stop pouring literal fuel on the metaphorical fire that's already raging. And with the technology that already exists, we can cover 99% of real end user needs.