The EV transition is real

Tesla stock price is half of what it was during the early doubling (or whatever) growth phase for a reason. The early adopters have been satisfied.

Of course no one would expect sky-high m/m, y/y growth forever.

As for installation here's a reddit topic I came across. Let me know what you think?


And prices, Tesla has lowered, lowered, lowered them.

Lastly my guess vast majority are again the early adopters, a lot who believe they are affecting change.

Anyone who pays over $1,000 for installation is likely including permit costs which aren't required in every city. This clown that got quoted $4100 probably lives in the bay area.
 
This type of wording always annoys me. There is no such thing as a tax-credit. Who is paying for this credit? Well... guess who pays taxes. THE PEOPLE. You've already paid. You're just paying more taxes now everywhere else, and through inflation tax.

It's the same shit like Trudeau's carbon-tax credits. Just another sham, which I'm happy to say Woke Canada is ready to oust him after 10 years of failed government and scandals (his own libertard party is already trying to get rid of him), and we're going to Axe-the-Tax when it comes to carbon schemes.

When people are broke, they no longer care about the environment or woke shit.
I get you. Let's repeal govt subsidies on oil and gas extraction, enough of this shit, time to pay what it really costs! :wtf::banghead:
 
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Shenzhen is way ahead.
 
I get you. Let's repeal govt subsidies on oil and gas extraction, enough of this shit, time to pay what it really costs! :wtf::banghead:
Which will then likely affect the price of electricity generated from oil and gas.

Chicken and egg.
 
How do you know?
I asked Google Gemini:

China is the world's leading producer of coal-fired electricity, generating around 52.5% of the world's total in 2022. This is nearly four times the amount generated by India, the second-largest producer. China also has the most coal-fired power plants in the world, with 1,142 operational plants on the Chinese mainland as of July 2023
 
...What happened? Some bit the bullet and registered. Many keep their out of state plates, as I did. Till a big enough uproar that, years later, they saw the folly of it and rescinded it...

That happened to me as well. I got the refund check for the impact fee. I hope you did too.
 
...There was an impact fee on vehicles that were bought out of state and then registered here, to "help" the local economy of in state dealerships plus of course help fill the state coffers with the revenue generated. More, more, more.

Oh, NVM, I re-read your post and you say you kept out-of-state plates on the car and did not register.

But that brings up a real irony overall...

The state had that BS environmental impact fee, yet the state has no safety and emissions inspection program in place.

The state that is SOOO worried about the environmental impact of cars coming into their state, yet for cars ALREADY in the state that are belching black smoke with bald tires and a cracked windshield can be registered no problem.

Flori-DUH.
 
I asked Google Gemini:

China is the world's leading producer of coal-fired electricity, generating around 52.5% of the world's total in 2022. This is nearly four times the amount generated by India, the second-largest producer. China also has the most coal-fired power plants in the world, with 1,142 operational plants on the Chinese mainland as of July 2023
China's renewable energy capacity has grown significantly over the last two decades, and in 2021 it exceeded 1,000 gigawatts (GW), accounting for 43.5% of the country's total power generation capacity. In 2020, China pledged to reach 1,200 GW of renewable capacity by 2030, but at its current pace, it may meet that target by 2025.
Yale E360

Renewable energy in China - Wikipedia
China's total renewable energy capacity exceeded 1,000 GW in 2021, accounting for 43.5 per...
China's renewable energy growth includes:
Solar: In 2022, China installed roughly as much solar capacity as the rest of the world combined, and then doubled that in 2023. China also dominates the solar panel supply chain, manufacturing more than twice global demand each year.
Wind: In 2023, China installed 66% more new wind turbines than the year before, and in the first quarter of 2024, wind power accounted for an average of 11.4% of China's total electricity generation.
Other renewables: China's renewable capacity also includes hydro and nuclear power.
China's clean-energy investments are also growing, with 2023 seeing a 40% year-on-year increase to 6.3 trillion yuan ($890 billion). This is almost as large as total global investments in fossil fuel supply in 2023, and clean-energy sectors contributed 11.4 trillion yuan ($1.6 trillion) to the Chinese economy in 2023, up 30% year-on-year.
Generative AI is experimental.
By the end of 2019, the country had a total capacity of 790 GW of renewable power, mainly from hydroelectric, solar and wind power. By the end of 2019, China's hydropower capacity reached 356 GW. China's installed capacity of solar power reached 252 GW and wind power capacity was 282 GW, as of 2020.

So how do you know these buses are powered by coal!
 
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