Tinker71
Well-known member
- First Name
- Ray
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2020
- Threads
- 93
- Messages
- 1,610
- Reaction score
- 2,102
- Location
- Utah
- Vehicles
- 1976 VW EV bus, 2007 Sienna, Tesla M3, Cancelled CT2 rez - holding for $65k
- Occupation
- Project Manager
- Thread starter
- #16
If I recall you live in California, which you would think is more EV friendly. That sucks. I think that is because you get state incentives at purchase. So maybe when the incentives go away they will make the registration fees just cover the road maintenance. Incentives really complicate the market.es, but the more cost isn't comparable to the damage done by that weight.
My motorcycle costs more to register than my ICE car. It's not any heavier than other motorcycles.
And the surcharge for an EV is more than what I pay for my ICE in gas taxes. These flat fees just don't work out as fair or equitable to the BEV owner.
I live in Utah and the flat tax for EVs is designed to break even after 12,000 miles per year. Unfortunately I my drive my M3 alot and average 20000 so I pay comparatively less. My EV bus on the other hand I only drive 1000 or so. They wanted me to pay $350 for that. I skirted the rules a little and register it as a Antique for $10.
Paying by the mass distance would be slick, but transponder tracking would trigger privacy concerns. Self estimating milage with annual reconciliations with true reconciliations at sale or transfer, or as you said safety inspections could work.
My post assumes 350 kW/Kg @ $80 as the tipping point. Tesla may get there next year. The other 4680 guys like LG will be in the same neighborhood. So we probably do need to keep the incentives up, but use a tipping point as the trigger to wean the incentive.
Once those factories are operating at scale it is game over ICE.
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