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True cost of charging an EV is equivalent to paying $17.33 a gallon.


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2023 Dec 15, 6:13am   7,958 views  131 comments

by GNL   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

True cost of charging an EV is equivalent to paying $17.33 a gallon of gas, per new report

By Olivia Murray

In October, I wrote an essay on a “bombshell report” from a Texas think tank “which revealed that the actual cost of rechargeable cars and the E.V. industry is, in reality, much higher than they’re leading us to believe.”

The report is around 20-pages long, so I was only able to cover one of the explosive revelations—the average battery-powered car (E.V.) would cost “approximately $48,698 more to own over a 10-year period” were it not for the “staggering” handouts from the taxpayer via an extortionary and feckless government—but there were more.

Now, not only were the energy experts able to quantify the additional cost over time, but they were also able to put a dollar amount on the real cost of charging the vehicle, translated into price per gallon of gasoline. As you might guess, the price is astronomical, but that’s not the the end of it.

While EV advocates claim charging costs are equivalent to $1.21-per-gallon gasoline, the real amount is an order of magnitude more.

Including the charging equipment, subsidies from governments and utilities and other frequently excluded expenses, the true cost of charging an EV is equivalent to $17.33-per-gallon gasoline — but the EV owner pays less than 7% of that.

So if the E.V. owner pays less than 7% of that massively inflated cost to “fuel” a car, that means more than 93% of the financial burden falls on the taxpayer—as the NY Post authors also write:

This is socialism for the rich: a transfer of costs from higher net-worth individuals to middle- and lower-income taxpayers.

It’s the equivalent of levying taxes and fees on public-transportation users and those who walk or bicycle to work and using the money to reduce the price of gasoline.

At this stage, E.V.s, if forced to stand on their own, are an utter failure, and as I noted in my previous blog, bad ideas and inferior products only find security in a “free” market… rigorously controlled by big government fascists. If our market were truly free, an extremely expensive car that can spontaneously combust, only works in a limited temperature range, occasionally malfunctions and locks occupants inside before rolling backwards into bodies of water, and costs $17.33 per “gallon” to “fuel” up, would be dead on arrival—as it should be.

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83   WookieMan   2023 Dec 19, 9:00am  

socal2 says

But the Commies running our government are true believers in Climate Change and don't want to fuck over the transition to EV's by taxing them too hard early on.

Last comment was good but meant to post in one comment.

I've said multiple times over and over that you SHOULD take advantage. Long term it's not going to be cheaper is all I'm saying. This is coming from the people that tax you. Not me. It will be a flick of the switch as well and you're going to be pissed. I wouldn't blame you. I'm not the bad guy. Don't shoot the messenger. I've made predictions. Shoot me if I'm wrong. Until then I'd be cautious with what you think is a winner is all.

Also, $30k for a Bolt is hysterical. I get the prices are coming down. But seriously, that's moving in the right direction?? I can buy a lot of things for $30k that benefit me more than a car. I could get a cheaper car. You EV guys had made this a religion. I'm not arguing that they're less cost for NOW. I'm talking future. I know what I know.
84   GNL   2023 Dec 19, 9:38am  

Not too many things are more beneficial than a vehicle.
85   Eman   2023 Dec 19, 10:27am  

@Wookieman,

What is long term to you? A decade or three?

What is the future to you? 2-5 years out or longer?

CA has already implemented a $175/year registration fee for EV to compensate for the “gas tax”. Backing out the number, it’s about right.

CA’s gas is freaking expensive compared to the nation due to all the required additives they make the refineries mix in with gas for “clean” burning. 😂 I still believe EV “saves” consumers money in CA. I don’t see myself going back to ICE in this life.
86   Eman   2023 Dec 19, 10:29am  

The reason I ask for your time frame so I can do a “cost analysis” for all to see vs. the funny number from the author presented
87   WookieMan   2023 Dec 19, 11:21am  

Eman says

I still believe EV “saves” consumers money in CA. I don’t see myself going back to ICE in this life.

Laugh all you want. Electric will be more expensive. If I'm wrong I'm wrong. I'll own it. I don't think I will be. Willing to take the gamble.
88   Eman   2023 Dec 19, 12:24pm  

@socal2,

The moment Tesla rolls out the $25k EV be it 2025 or 2026, it’s game over for Corolla and Civic. The $7.5k tax credit is good till 2032 IIRC in addition to the state, local and utility company tax rebates.
89   Eman   2023 Dec 19, 12:25pm  

WookieMan says

Eman says


I still believe EV “saves” consumers money in CA. I don’t see myself going back to ICE in this life.

Laugh all you want. Electric will be more expensive. If I'm wrong I'm wrong. I'll own it. I don't think I will be. Willing to take the gamble.

Nothing to laugh about. I’m a numbers guy. I let that do the talking. It has served me well. No reason to change it if it’s not broken.
90   Eman   2023 Dec 19, 10:00pm  

Agree or disagree is irrelevant. The government will do what it wants to do. The goals, achievable or not, are up for debate. I highly doubt they’ll be achieved, but that’s just my opinion.

20% of all vehicles sold to be zero emissions by 2026

60% of all vehicles sold to be zero emissions by 2030.

100% of all vehicles sold to be zero emissions by 2035.


91   WookieMan   2023 Dec 20, 4:33am  

Eman says

Agree or disagree is irrelevant. The government will do what it wants to do. The goals, achievable or not, are up for debate. I highly doubt they’ll be achieved, but that’s just my opinion.

20% of all vehicles sold to be zero emissions by 2026

60% of all vehicles sold to be zero emissions by 2030.

100% of all vehicles sold to be zero emissions by 2035.




It's not irrelevant. I don't think you understand what is coming. Government doesn't actually care about clean energy. They are going to tax you. Your numbers now work and you're right NOW. They 100% won't work in the near future.

If they can squeeze 50¢ a gallon out of ICE vehicles you can bet your ass they'll do the same with EV's. It's also a tracking mechanism. Again I'm not saying you're wrong for enjoying it now. What I'm saying is the wild west of EV's is coming to an end. My argument is about infrastructure, not the car. I'm 100% right.

Unless you're cool paying for blown out tires and broken axles than EV's are the future I guess. You cannot take away 3-6% of MFT taxes and expect already shit roads to be better. You say you're a numbers guy. These are real numbers. There's too many people that don't want EV's as well. A majority in fact. So it's an uphill battle to not be taxed more. Get ready for it.

The other thing is and I know it won't move someone like you. You can manage. You could get taxed and not care. The people paying $30-40k for a car they can't afford thinking they're doing the "good" thing are going to be screwed. They're blind. If you get hit it's a big who gives a shit, I got the money. People are being led down a path of getting their asses handed to them. It's fact. EV's 100% will be comparable to ICE vehicles within a few years per mile.
92   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2023 Dec 20, 9:56am  

And, as long as electric utility ratepayers are going to get nailed for paying the infrastructure tab so EV owners can charge their cars, it's game over when those rate increases hit.

Whereas the gasoline/diesel distribution infrastructure is pretty self contained so that the entire bill is paid by just the end users (vehicle owners).
93   Eric Holder   2023 Dec 20, 1:50pm  

Eman says

socal2,

The moment Tesla rolls out the $25k EV be it 2025 or 2026, it’s game over for Corolla and Civic. The $7.5k tax credit is good till 2032 IIRC in addition to the state, local and utility company tax rebates.


There is a small fly in that ointment: Civic and Corolla (Forte, Impresa, etc) will still have an upper leg in ease of refuelling, which is important to dorm- and apt-dwelling young people who mostly buy that type of car. So if $25K Tesla materializes and is eligible for $7500 most of its potential buyers will either not have access to home charging or won't qualify for $7.5K in gubming cheese, or both.
94   WookieMan   2023 Dec 20, 2:30pm  

Eric Holder says

So if $25K Tesla materializes and is eligible for $7500 most of its potential buyers will either not have access to home charging or won't qualify for $7.5K in gubming cheese, or both.

Bingo. And it's not just that. It's cost per mile. It will 100% be the same as ICE vehicles. Government gives no shits about "green" energy or EV's. For what we sent to Ukraine we could have built out a solar array that would cover at least 50% of our power needs nationwide. They are and will come after your EV. It will not be cheaper.

Tesla and full EV's really only work in warm weather, short commute areas. This isn't debatable. Guess what, 50%+ of the US is not that market. We ain't paying for your luxury toy that you pay nothing towards road maintenance or improvement. The government agrees. People can say I'm wrong. I'm not.
95   socal2   2023 Dec 20, 3:03pm  

WookieMan says

It's cost per mile. It will 100% be the same as ICE vehicles.


Doubtful, maybe in Commie Illinois land where they have to tax the living shit out of everything to maintain the jungle society in Chicago.

Even if it ends up costing the same per mile in the future because government taxes the shit out of electricity, driving EV's (especially Tesla's) is far superior and more enjoyable than any primitive ICE car.

There are so many other benefits of EV's beyond the economy. Tesla's are literally the safest cars on the planet right now.

Tesla Model Y wins 2023 safety award with “near-perfect safety rating”
https://thedriven.io/2023/01/23/tesla-model-y-wins-2023-safety-award-with-near-perfect-safety-rating/
96   GNL   2023 Dec 20, 3:10pm  

I believe the true intent of the green "revolution" is 1. to conserve gas/oil (the last nation with gas/oil wins) and/or 2. such a huge change can move money. Movement of money can make people who are positioned correctly, BIG MONEY.
97   Eman   2023 Dec 20, 3:56pm  

Talking about the safest car. According to the Firefighter Chief. This was the only person/family that survived the devil slide in his 50 years of experience. It was simply a miracle.

https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/tesla-crash-warrant-18097182.php
98   Eman   2023 Dec 20, 4:00pm  

Eric Holder says

Eman says


socal2,

The moment Tesla rolls out the $25k EV be it 2025 or 2026, it’s game over for Corolla and Civic. The $7.5k tax credit is good till 2032 IIRC in addition to the state, local and utility company tax rebates.


There is a small fly in that ointment: Civic and Corolla (Forte, Impresa, etc) will still have an upper leg in ease of refuelling, which is important to dorm- and apt-dwelling young people who mostly buy that type of car. So if $25K Tesla materializes and is eligible for $7500 most of its potential buyers will either not have access to home charging or won't qualify for $7.5K in gubming cheese, or both.

We’ll find out in the coming years. Just like how the skeptics said the Cybertruck would not be produced, or how Tesla would go bankrupt, etc….

Getting the $7.5k tax credit is the easy part IMO. If the kids work, they can claim it. If not, I’m sure their parents will cosign, file the taxes and get the credit.

I maybe jaded as I live in the Bay Area. It seems like people figure out how to charge their EV without issues.
99   ForcedTQ   2023 Dec 20, 7:57pm  

PumpingRedheads says

And, as long as electric utility ratepayers are going to get nailed for paying the infrastructure tab so EV owners can charge their cars, it's game over when those rate increases hit.

Whereas the gasoline/diesel distribution infrastructure is pretty self contained so that the entire bill is paid by just the end users (vehicle owners).


As it should be for EV users as well, but now co-mingling without separate metering of EV charging circuits has severely muddied the waters.
100   GNL   2023 Dec 20, 8:01pm  

Here's a question: why are Teslas so ugly? The cheap model looks no better than a VW Bug. For $100,000 car/truck comparison, look at the Porsche, Corvette, Escalade or even a decked out F-150. How about the Ford Raptor? Styling is not Tesla's forte.
101   GNL   2023 Dec 21, 5:19am  

This is a joke, right? Not only that but, how long has this truck been in the works? Must be something I'm missing but, what is so different that it can't be to market yet?


102   HeadSet   2023 Dec 21, 7:12am  

GNL says

Here's a question: why are Teslas so ugly? The cheap model looks no better than a VW Bug. For $100,000 car/truck comparison, look at the Porsche, Corvette, Escalade or even a decked out F-150. How about the Ford Raptor? Styling is not Tesla's forte.

May have to do with standing out. For non-car fans, a Ford F-150, a Chevy Silverado, a GMC Sierra, Toyota Tundra, Nissan Titan, and a RAM 1500 all look pretty much the same. The Tesla truck is obvious to everyone it is a Tesla.
103   WookieMan   2023 Dec 21, 7:15am  

GNL says

Here's a question: why are Teslas so ugly? The cheap model looks no better than a VW Bug. For $100,000 car/truck comparison, look at the Porsche, Corvette, Escalade or even a decked out F-150. How about the Ford Raptor? Styling is not Tesla's forte.

I don't care about car looks in my comments here. A to B. I'd rather have a nice watch or even a nice pair of jeans over an over priced car be it Tesla or Porsche.

I can't drive the point home any more. ANY EV is more expensive MSRP and will in the near future be as expensive or more expensive than ICE cars to operate MPG(equivalent) wise. I can make a golf cart perform the same as any model Tesla for $5k. It's electric motors and batteries. It's not complicated. It's expensive and between labor and minerals used it's a negative big time.

Enjoy. I don't actually care. I'm just warning you Telsa homers that the time of reckoning is coming. You will be charged via tax or utility as much or more than an ICE vehicle. Enjoy the ride. I have. I have no interest in paying 2-3x's as much for a car that has no utility and will be even more expensive in the future.
104   Eric Holder   2023 Dec 21, 8:04am  

GNL says


Here's a question: why are Teslas so ugly? The cheap model looks no better than a VW Bug. For $100,000 car/truck comparison, look at the Porsche, Corvette, Escalade or even a decked out F-150. How about the Ford Raptor? Styling is not Tesla's forte.


Not sure if serious: ModelS looks very good to me. The rest looks worse because just stretching/sclaing of a good design rarely comes out perfect. Cybertruck is a fucking joke, of course, no argument there, but it was designed by Elon himself, not that Dutch ex-Mazda, ex-Audi designer who penned the ModelS. Porch has his chare of ugly ducklings too (first Panamera, anyone?) and don't get me started on the Bimmer's latest designs.
105   Eric Holder   2023 Dec 21, 8:07am  

EVs do depreciate the fastest: https://www.iseecars.com/cars-that-hold-their-value-study

The worst offenders are the top-spec EVs like Plaid Teslas, Taycan Turbo-S, Lucid Air, Audi e-Tron and such. You can buy one of these for literally 1/2 price at 1 y.o.
106   WookieMan   2023 Dec 21, 9:44am  

Eric Holder says

EVs do depreciate the fastest: https://www.iseecars.com/cars-that-hold-their-value-study

The worst offenders are the top-spec EVs like Plaid Teslas, Taycan Turbo-S, Lucid Air, Audi e-Tron and such. You can buy one of these for literally 1/2 price at 1 y.o.

I paid $1,300 for a 48v golf cart battery. It was cheap Chinese crap (does still work). That's to move a 300lbs vehicle. A car is going to be 10x's. And yes, the batteries do fail.

You have all the same expenses as an ICE vehicle. An ICE motor is going to outlast a EV battery with basic maintenance 10 out of 10 times. It has to be replaced and it's not cheap. Let me know who has replaced an ICE engine (not for upgrades) in the last 20-30 years? No one. It is fact you'll have to replace a battery pack on any EV. I'm not Tesla bashing. It's just fact. That will be 5 figures. And that price won't change with adaptation. Battery prices are not coming down and probably never will.

Factor in the coming price to operate increases, you bought a "luxury" car that will cost as much as a high end Audi, Mercedes, etc. AKA a waste of money and then pay more for electric, registration or however the government WILL rape you. 2025. Government takes a while to realize that it shot itself in the foot on green energy. You cannot reduce tax revenue. It's not even an argument. EV's reduce tax revenue. I don't why this is so complicated for some.
107   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2023 Dec 21, 9:57am  

WookieMan says

I paid $1,300 for a 48v golf cart battery.


Just spit my coffee thru my nose while reading that. Damn you Wookie!

:)~
108   GNL   2023 Dec 21, 10:04am  

GNL says

This is a joke, right? Not only that but, how long has this truck been in the works? Must be something I'm missing but, what is so different that it can't be to market yet?




This looks like old, tired and Grey communism.
109   RWSGFY   2023 Dec 21, 10:28am  

You can buy a low-miles engine from a JDM car for ~$1500 and swap it in your garage in 2 weekends using a $150 HF engine hoist. Can you buy a used Tesla battery and swap
it in? Sure, but it won't be $1500 + 150. There is a guy on youtube making videos about fixing Teslas, so it is doable, but def more costly than fixing ICE cars.
110   WookieMan   2023 Dec 21, 10:34am  

PumpingRedheads says

WookieMan says


I paid $1,300 for a 48v golf cart battery.


Just spit my coffee thru my nose while reading that. Damn you Wookie!

:)~

I'm a fucking idiot sometimes. I'll admit that. It's fun to get around town and the cart was free to me. Hopefully a 10 year battery, so amortized it's not that much. New hobby too. I need to keep busy.
112   WookieMan   2023 Dec 21, 7:28pm  

PumpingRedheads says





This is what I don't think the EV people understand. I'm not paying for the grid update. I literally won't. Who are they gonna charge to update or add capacity? Not me. EV drivers.

When MFT funds are down 5-10%. Where does that money come from? With inflation and labor costs it's probably closer to 15-20% in states with high EV usage. They don't get it. Just because it's not happening now doesn't mean it's not coming. They will be taxed or have increased electric rates on par with the cost of gas. This is undeniable.
113   Eman   2024 Jan 11, 4:00pm  

Saw this post on X and thought of this thread. I’m not smart enough to understand the true cost of operating an EV or an ICE vehicle, and which is more subsidized, or more expensive.

https://x.com/nicklasnilsso14/status/1744615674423484786?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q
114   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jan 11, 5:05pm  

WookieMan says

This is what I don't think the EV people understand. I'm not paying for the grid update. I literally won't. Who are they gonna charge to update or add capacity? Not me. EV drivers.


Exactly. Or more likely: they are going to TRY to foist that onto non-EV owning ratepayers. And in a lot of cases they are going to succeed. But there will be a limit at which point ratepayers will revolt.

We are already hitting that point with renewables.
115   Eman   2024 Jan 11, 5:22pm  

I don’t like to rely on others for anything so I installed solar. I designed the system with degradation and future (3rd EV usage) buffer. My solar produces more electricity than I consume. In fact, I’ll be getting a credit from PG&E. Good luck with folks who rely on PG&E for their electricity. I don’t like to screw others, but also don’t like to get screwed.


116   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jan 11, 5:54pm  

Eman says


Saw this post on X and thought of this thread. I’m not smart enough to understand the true cost of operating an EV or an ICE vehicle, and which is more subsidized, or more expensive.

https://x.com/nicklasnilsso14/status/1744615674423484786?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q


Lot of that is bullshit. Truth is EVs are are way more energy intensive to make. That energy is fossil fuel extensive. (Same applies to polysilicon). And require more minerals than an ICE. Some quite exotic.

Worldwide nickle production alone will have to increase 20x. Copper 4x.

Not gonna happen.



The scaling up of EVs to be a significant portion of the motor vehicle fleet will be impossible to do. You can't just whip up new mines. Nor the processing capacity to do it. It is mostly done in China because they don't have any environmental enforcement and have no qualms about building new coal plants for the power.

Recycling claims are also bullshit just as they are for wind turbines and solar panels UNLESS they are manufactured differently (as in ways that increase costs 4 -6 fold). They can probably get to the lithium in the battery cells, tho.

BUT you need to mine the shit to begin with before it can be recycled. See above.

AND THAT doesn't even take into consideration what's needed to power the damn things...AT SCALE. This is what Wookie is getting into.

New battery tech that uses less/different materials? Like Sodium Ion Batts?

A strawman barfed up by people who can't argue against this. Even the Sodium Ion batteries still need those other minerals.

Graphene buckypaper supercapaciters would be a real game changer that would make a difference, sure. But that is science fiction until you see it mass manufactured. Room temp superconductors even more so.
117   WookieMan   2024 Jan 12, 12:08am  

UkraineIsFucked says

AND THAT doesn't even take into consideration what's needed to power the damn things...AT SCALE. This is what Wookie is getting into

I generally don't get into the battery itself. It's hard to break through a cult through that avenue. If we double EV's to 6-10% of the overall market, where in the flying fuck is the electric coming from? I'm glad Eman can charge for $0 dollars. That's less than 1% of EV drivers. Where is the money coming from for solar? Where is the money coming from for power? ME. Coal.

It's literally the least efficient, most polluting means of travel. More expensive out the gate when you can save $10-30k with a hybrid, pay gas AND still come out way ahead. This is math. As I'll continue to say, enjoy Tesla, I've had fun driving them. It's not cheaper and it's not green at all.
118   SunnyvaleCA   2024 Jan 12, 1:28am  

WookieMan says

[EVs are] literally the least efficient, most polluting means of travel.

Around here we have that beaten easily... hydrogen powered fuel cell vehicles!

Hydrogen is stripped from natural gas (releasing loads of CO2) then compressed and cooled (takes loads of mechanical energy, so maybe 30% loss of energy). While waiting to be put into a car (the Toyota Murai, to be specific), it is constantly evaporating to keep the pressure from exploding the holding tank (maybe 5% loss per day). Once in the Murai it continues to evaporate, but is eventually run through a fuel cell to generate electricity (10% loss in that chemical -> electrical conversion) but doesn't just drive an electric motor! No! The fuel cell isn't powerful enough to run an electric motor when the vehicle is accelerating, so the fuel cell charges a LiON battery (5% loss) and then the LiON battery runs the electric motor (5% loss). The other benefit of the LiON battery is that the fuel cell process isn't reversible, so the LiON handles the regenerative braking.

If we had infinite fusion power we could use hydrogen as energy storage because we could create it from electrolysis of water. Although electrolysis is an even less efficient starting point, if you you have unlimited fusion energy, go for it! But even then, the system would be much more expensive than just synthesizing methane and re-introducing the Honda Civic GX — a viable ICE car that you filled up at home from natural gas.
119   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jan 12, 7:08am  

SunnyvaleCA says

If we had infinite fusion power we could use hydrogen as energy storage because we could create it from electrolysis of water. Although electrolysis is an even less efficient starting point, if you you have unlimited fusion energy, go for it! But even then, the system would be much more expensive than just synthesizing methane and re-introducing the Honda Civic GX — a viable ICE car that you filled up at home from natural gas.


They have developed fuel cells that can strip the hydrogen from a hydrocarbon like methane. Don't think it is commercializable tho.
120   RWSGFY   2024 Jan 12, 8:10am  

Jump on Google maps, search for Hydrogen fuel stations and marvel at horror stories in the reviews section.
121   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2024 Jan 12, 8:17am  

SunnyvaleCA says


Toyota Murai


I've been stuck behind those (or maybe the same guy) in stop and go traffic on my daily commute in SD. It shoots what looks like a urine stream out the back of the car and when we got lucky enough to reach maybe 40mph it would bounce off of the pavement and hit my windshield. I hate getting behind those things.
122   RWSGFY   2024 Jan 12, 8:21am  

just_passing_through says


SunnyvaleCA says


Toyota Murai


I've been stuck behind those (or maybe the same guy) in stop and go traffic on my daily commute in SD. It shoots what looks like a urine stream out the back of the car and when we got lucky enough to reach maybe 40mph it would bounce off of the pavement and hit my windshield. I hate getting behind those things.



It's water, but it is annoying AF.

PS. They are practically giving them away now: you can buy a 2yo off-lease Mirai for $18-19K and it comes with a $15K "gas card".

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