Sadly, we got the platypus/whale thing instead.I could see the USPS using these as local delivery vehicles to replace the ancient Grummans. Not sure the range would be sufficient but it looks like that type of vehicle to me.
It's a very ugly vehicle, but also solved many of the problems with the unique needs of a USPS delivery vehicle needing to carry large volumes of packages while also still delivering sorted first class mail to mailboxes. Couriers have liked this a lot more than the ancient LLVs and various vans.
I agree that for "right now" we have enough power, but by 2045 California power generation will look much, much different. ~60% of current power is generated by fossil fuels and nuclear, both of which will be gone by 2045. That needs to be replaced, and expanded upon, by renewal energy. Renewables are not "dispatchable" and can't accommodate peak demand fluctuations. This creates the so called "duck curve" problem, that will get worse in the decades to come. Peak demand is in summer evenings, when most people are home and using the A/C. Solar and wind can't match the demand fluctuations like Gas/Nuclear can.People who say "we / the grid don't have charging capacity to charge more electric cars" are unaware that there is more than enough grid generating power RIGHT NOW.
Car can be considered an appliance. Just like other appliances you plug in at home. They take more than a TV set and less than whole home air conditioning.
And power use has been flat for a long time. Weird. Look at which states are using the most power per person! NOT California where like 20% of the cars are EV right now!
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https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/images/2021.08.06/main.svg
Most generating station will beg you to use more power and even give discounts to use more power.
Scheduled charging.The big problem with EVs is that everyone will be charging around the same time, right when they get home.
I think the grid is doing really well considering well over 1000 more people per day are moving into Texas than are moving out. Plus very large number of commercial users also increasing usage. When you add 15% generating capacity in one year and usage increases more than that it's tough to keep up.Scheduled charging.
I suspect “most” people aren’t going to burn through their entire battery every day, and could easily set their cars to start charging during off-peak hours.
I wouldn’t use our ridiculous Texas power grid as a shining example for much at all, but the utility providers here already incentivize off-peak use for residential customers. “Free nights and weekends” used to just be the slogan of cellular companies…
That's a good point, but with only Solar and Wind (here in CA) in 2045 that could be difficult at 1am.Scheduled charging.
I suspect “most” people aren’t going to burn through their entire battery every day, and could easily set their cars to start charging during off-peak hours.
I wouldn’t use our ridiculous Texas power grid as a shining example for much at all, but the utility providers here already incentivize off-peak use for residential customers. “Free nights and weekends” used to just be the slogan of cellular companies…
RE Texas Grid coming.....Scheduled charging.
I suspect “most” people aren’t going to burn through their entire battery every day, and could easily set their cars to start charging during off-peak hours.
I wouldn’t use our ridiculous Texas power grid as a shining example for much at all, but the utility providers here already incentivize off-peak use for residential customers. “Free nights and weekends” used to just be the slogan of cellular companies…