Just came back from Shanghai, same situation, BUT from talking to people there are three big reasons for that:
1. The government built the EV charger infrastructure so that even the remotest areas are covered, the chargers have one universal way to use them and you can't go far without seeing one
2. In big cities China made car registration much more expensive for non-EVs
3. Prices of EVs in china are much lower than anywhere in the world
None of these apply for Europe or US, and I am doutbful they can make a swift transition like China can.
>None of these apply for Europe or US, and I am doutbful they can make a swift transition like China can.
If the US government would allow Chinese EV car makers to enter the market without friction, the price of EVs in the US would drop rapidly. But I think the anti-China smearing campaign and protectionist policies do a good job of preventing that.
Charging doesn't mean infrastructure like roads, bridges. If there is a building, it already has electricity. Running a cable from the building to parking lot (10s of feet) is not really that complicated. Also most countries are on 220V/240V standard, a regular outlet works perfectly fine.
The electricity price isn't the issue, over 10 years EVs are cheaper to run than ICE vehicles anywhere in the world. The problem is the upfront cost, it doesn't matter if it's cheaper in the long run if you can't afford it now.
1. The government built the EV charger infrastructure so that even the remotest areas are covered, the chargers have one universal way to use them and you can't go far without seeing one
2. In big cities China made car registration much more expensive for non-EVs
3. Prices of EVs in china are much lower than anywhere in the world
None of these apply for Europe or US, and I am doutbful they can make a swift transition like China can.