While the EPA has been working their little minds into a frenzy over EVs, the market's reluctance to embrace the cost nightmare of current EVs has saved them from having to approve the bunches of new electrical generation plants that would need to be built in order to satisfy the new demand for electricity to recharge all those electron burners.
Can you imagine the laws that would need to be passed if there were indeed mass market adoption of EVs? Everyone that needs to recharge in order to get home would be in for a the headache of getting a permit to charge during the day. Since there is massive demand for electricity during the day when factories start up and air conditioners kick on so that people can work, there would be little excess to charge all the cars that would need to get home. Thus, in order to make it work, the new laws would prohibit the charging of cars during the day. You don't disappear the need to recharge during the night, so there will need to be large numbers of new electrcial generation plants built, and that is not an overnight project. And power companies are loathe to build a power plant that just sits there unused, so that will not happen in advance of demand.
And what about the EPA in all this? Has the EPA shown interest in approving new power plants of any fuel type? How about a nuclear plant? And have they ever admitted to a love for hydroelectric generation? Seems to me there is a separate set of enviro-loonies that want to tear down every dam they can, hydroelectric or not.
Methinks the whole economy and physical station of the country needs to be considered before this push to EVs can make sense. Right now, it certainly does not.
Cheers,
PH