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Again, if the vehicles is so great, WHY do you have to have the government pay you to buy the vehicle?
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Even Pri started out with a government subsidy - now they are doing so well, even you use them as a cost comparison. If oil is so great why does the government subsidize the oil business? If coal is so great why does the government subsidize coal? I realize I got a 'subsidy' to buy my vehicle - and why shouldn't I get a tax break, when big oil has for decades? You want a piece of the pie - buy an electric car, or not... We live in a land where the government does make some decisions to create opportunity for new technology. Since the government has been cutting back on subsidizing research, this is the way they have decided to augment research, with rebates. Here they are, in fact, subsidizing battery technology. Batteries are improving a lot and one of the big drivers is vehicles. Tesla wouldn't be selling nearly 300,000 cars without the rebate, but since it is, it will get to pour money into improving battery technology, something that will filter into many different industries. Edit - oh, I see you neglected to do the math on the cost of operating my car - I wonder why that is? |
You never actually answered the question
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I also looked at a CTh at $30,000. I liked the Volt better than the Lexus, and would have chosen the $28k Volt over the $30k hybrid, all things 'even'. I certainly wasn't going to walk away from the rebates however, that would have been stupid. Again, I asked first - how about that math for computing the cost of operating my car? We all know you chose one of the highest cost per kilowatt hour locations in the US for your comparison, how about mine? |
Yes, let's all pretend that battery tech is new, and also pretend that phones and such don't all ready massively incentivize new batter R&D.
Yep. Let's pretend that only govt funding of a darling car company will get us to unicorn powered bliss. :rolleyes: |
So we're trillions in debt and give money to a billionaire who makes $100K daily drivers for the stylishly wealthy. And loses money on every sale.
Makes sense.....if you're a liberal idiot. |
Electric rate seems a little off: The Boulder, CO electric rate is $0.1105/kWh
Boulder, CO Electricity Rates | Electricity Local |
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I could not care less about the relative costs or subsidies. The Model 3 is interesting to me because it will come with the 2nd engine option and have a fast mode... Taht's if they redo the nose, that thing is uglier than a scooter. |
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Again, the math? edit - for some reason the link ends up 'truncating' -http://www.**********.com/business/ci_29262867/xcel-plans-decrease-electric-gas-rates-early-2016 - the ****** need to be replaced with denver post - one word |
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Makes sense, if you are a conservative pawn. |
I still don't get how they make money on these at even $50k. --let alone the base $35k. Even the Model S is rather Spartan at $100k+
Tesla has had one profitable quarter, in 13 years, and that was from selling a bunch of govt manufactured carbon credits. |
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The fact is, if a technology is appealing enough to stand on its own merits, there is no tax incentive required. Nobody subsidized the iPhone, because consumers wanted it so bad they were willing to stand in line for hours to have one. It would be interesting to see how that interest in Tesla changes with the removal of the tax incentives. Propping up a business that isn't financially viable with subsidies is a totally different topic altogether, you can easily lump Tesla in with GM and Chrysler to ask why our tax dollars should be supporting automakers. |
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And on battery limitations... http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1460219379.jpg Point being, 'fossil fuels' have massively more energy density than the limited electro-chemical battery. And believe me, Plenty is being done to find ways to build a better battery. (cell phones to satellites --the motivation has existed for decades. Hell, WW2 subs would run on batteries.) |
I'll ammend my statement as I wasn't specific enough. The limitation isn't electricity, as an electric motor is much more efficient than an internal combustion engine. The limitation is battery energy density.
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Foxy, the average rate for Electricity in Colorado is around 11.6 cents per kWh. You claim to have 2.6 cents per kWh, which isn't low, it is below cost.
Instead of a link, why not post a redacted electric bill. |
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I would far prefer a consumption tax and do away with the ten of thousands of tax breaks. But this won't happen because too many legislators make a living generating tax breaks for this group or that group. |
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Back to the original issue, electricity does not travel well beyond a certain distance. Even at the very high voltages, it has significant losses. Distributed generation is best. Battery storage technology STILL isn't great. It weighs too much. It takes too long to charge. And some of the new technologies are prone to catch fire. Tesla came out with the "Power Wall". It came in 2 flavors, 7kWh for $3000 and 10kWh for $3500. You had to put down a deposit to get in line for a Powerwall. Details were skant. Now, the 10kWh is cancelled. The 7 kWh is really 6.4 kWh. And it still doesn't come with any of the equipment needed to make it work. Tesla generated $250-300M in working capital in these deposits. They are marketing geniuses. But the actual products always seem to fall short. |
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