Posted on 03/23/2024 9:10:43 AM PDT by george76
The Biden administration’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has revealed its ambition: to phase out gas-powered cars in favor of electric vehicles (EVs). Incredibly, this announcement comes as we are flooded with overwhelming evidence that EVs are a market loser.
Indeed, the artificial boom and then meltdown of the EV market is a modern industrial calamity. It was created by government, social media, wild disease frenzy, far-flung thinking, and the irrational chasing of utopia, followed by a rude awakening by facts and reality.
CEO of Hertz Stephen Scherr has been booted out due to a vast purchase of an EV fleet that consumers didn’t even want to rent. The company has now been forced to sell them at a deep discount and in a market where consumers are not particularly interested.
Looking back, however, Scherr’s decision to bet everything on an EV boom was a disaster that was highly praised at the time. Only last year, the company bragged: “This morning, [Hertz] was recognized by The White House for our efforts to expand access to electric vehicles across the country. Demand for EV rentals is growing and we’re here to help our customers electrify their travels.”
Pleasing the Biden administration is not the same as pleasing consumers.
The demand turned south fast in a real-world test of drivers. But that’s not all. Hertz could not make their investment pay no matter what they did.
The key issues with EVs are as follows.
The cost upfront is much higher.
Financing charges are higher.
They depreciate at a higher rate than internal combustion cars.
The insurance is more expensive, by at least 25 percent.
Repairs are much more expensive, if you can get them done at all, and take longer.
Tires are more expensive and don’t last as long because the car is so heavy.
Refueling is not easy and missteps here can have nightmarish consequences.
They are more likely to catch fire.
Any motor vehicle accident that impacts the battery can lead to repairs higher than the value of the car, that is totaled with so much as a scratch.
To top it all over, there is no longer any financial advantage to the driver. It now costs slightly more to charge under many conditions than to refuel with gasoline.
The novelty of driving one for a day wears off after the first day. At first they seem like the greatest thing that ever happened, like an iPhone with wheels. That’s great but then the problems crop up and people start to realize that they are fine for urban commutes with home chargers and not much else.
They make truly terrible rentals. Obviously, under rental conditions, people have to use charging stations rather than a charger in the garage. That means spending part of your vacation figuring out where to find one.
Not all are superchargers, and if it is a regular charger, you are looking at an overnight wait. If you do find a station with fast chargers, you might have to wait in line. They might not work. You waste hours doing this. And you likely have to reroute your trip even to find a station without any certainty that you will get a spot with a functioning charger.
No one wants to do this. When you rent a car, all you want is a car that goes the distance. And typically car rentals are for going some distance else you would just take a taxi or a Lyft from the airport. You might need to drive several hours. And god forbid that this takes place in cold weather because that can reduce your mileage by half. Your whole trip will be ruined.
Why in the world would anyone want to rent one of these things rather than a gas-powered car? You might be better off with a horse and carriage.
Did Hertz think of any of this before they spent $250M on a fleet? Nope. They were just doing the fashionable thing.
Again, I’m not knocking some uses for EVs. If you think of them as enclosed and souped up golf carts, you get the idea. They can be wonderful for certain urban environments so long as you don’t overuse them and have to get them repaired. You also have to be in a financial position to afford the higher costs all around, from financing to insurance to repairs and tires. And you have to be prepared to take a big loss on resale, if you can even manage to find a buyer.
There is money to be made in this market, as there is with any niche good or service. But that is covered with normal market conditions, not massive subsidies, mandates, and frenzies. The Hertz case proves it. It is a perfect clinical trial of these machines. We now know the answer. They cannot work.
And thank goodness because if the United States truly switched over in a big way from gas to electric, we would face other disasters. The wear and tear on roads is much worse due to the sheer weight of the cars, which is 25 percent higher than gas cars on average. Many parking garages would have to be rebuilt with new reinforcements.
Then there is the strain on the grid. There is no way the industry could handle the demand. Brownouts and travel restrictions would be essential. All this would pave the way toward 15-minute cities.
Please remember how this craze began. It was lockdown time and automakers suspended orders for parts and chips. They stopped cranking out cars. When demand intensified, the chip makers had moved on to other things, so delays escalated. By the summer of 2021, there was a general panic about a growing car shortage.
At that point, consumers were willing to buy anything on the lot, among which EVs. The sales records were completely misinterpreted. The manufacturers made huge investments, and the car rental companies did too. But the product had not really been tested. That test is taking place now, and the EVs are completely failing.
We keep hearing that this is still too early, that development has a long way to go, that more charging stations are coming, that manufacturers are going to overcome all these problems in time. All of this sounds very similar to what the producers of mRNA shots say: this was just a trial run and they will get better the next time.
Maybe but doubtful. There is a huge problem in the investment market right now. EVs are massive losers. Consumers, manufacturers, car rental companies, and every other market in which these lemons are made available are running away from them as fast as possible. They had their day in the sun and got fried.
There is another problem: surveillance. The car can be tracked anywhere and shut off at a moment’s notice. This is obviously a great thing if the government desires a social-credit system of citizens control.
At this point, it is doubtful that the industry can recover. And yet, even now, the Biden administration is planning more subsidies, more mandates, more restrictions on gas cars, and digging themselves even deeper into this hole.
“The Biden administration on Wednesday issued one of the most significant climate regulations in the nation’s history, a rule designed to ensure that the majority of new passenger cars and light trucks sold in the United States are all-electric or hybrids by 2032,” reports the New York Times.
You simply cannot make up nuttier stuff. At some point, we could see manufacturers making the cars just to satisfy the central planners but otherwise preparing to chop them up and throw them out. They would likely be happy to dump them in the ocean but that isn’t allowed either.
I've met so many business managers and CEOs who, like game-show hucksters, are ready to spend investors and owners' money simply "following the latest thing." In a low-growth, competitive industry like car-rentals, how else does one make a name for oneself or potentially earn $tens of millions in bonuses, unless one places ridiculous bets?
A CEO candidate who simply said, I'm going to focus on cost-control, key employee retention, and operational efficiency to grow our market share and profit a few % points, would be called "boring" and and "lacking vision."
Hertz was already on life support than they made this epic blunder. No one who mattered had the common sense to realize people who rent cars do not want to have to deal with the nightmare of public charging stations. Almost unbelievable
The I-95 elites think the whole country can just hop a bus or train to get where they need to go. They have no idea of the distances between services in the flyover states.
On another post, someone made the point that the vehicle must be fully charged before its returned. When we rent a car, we always find a gas station near the airport to fill up. Charging would add another couple hours to the return process.
“There is another problem: surveillance. The car can be tracked anywhere and shut off at a moment’s notice. This is obviously a great thing if the government desires a social-credit system of citizens control”
☝️
THAT......I’m glad someone finally said it out loud.
Driving is just one more freedom the left sees as an opportunity to control and force compliance.
They have no idea of the distances between services in the flyover states.
So the CEO made a mistake, a big one. Do you think it will change his thinking? Even in an election one can only hope to ‘shave’ a few percent of voters from the other side.
Good to see they finally got rid of CEO Scherr who was vying with former GE CEO Immelt for title of worst CEO in the history of the world
Perhaps the major auto manufacturers will get into the golf cart business.
EC
“the vehicle must be fully charged before its returned”
If that is in fact the case, hertz should be run out of business for that stupid policy alone.
Rental vehicles are supposed to be cleaned and vacuumed between rentals, why not charge it then?
Putting the burden of recharge on the customer is asinine to say the least.
Liberals don’t care about EV troubles, and they don’t really like EVs.
Liberals are opposed to individual transportation, unless you’re talking bicycles. A future without ICEs and EVs will suit liberals just fine.
Life is tough if you can’t do maths....
>> Did Hertz think of any of this before they spent $250M
Did Bud Light think of the consequences?
Not sure it’s possible to prevent stolen elections, but the consumer still has the power of the purse, and that may be the last weapon at our disposal aside from Divine Intervention.
Hertz was already on life support than they made this epic blunder. No one who matter
That, and the caveat re propensity to catch on fire means your little charging shed had better be a safe distance from your house.
When they perfect a charging system that needs no more than a solar panel the size of a cell phone that stores the charge for up to a week and charges in less than an hour, when they perfect that? Then, gimme a call.
+1
I had a relative that lived in Arlington Va. She just couldn’t figure out why we just didn’t hop on the subway and go to the doctor in Phoenix from Tucson.
Biden wants all government employees to use EVs, take trains
https://electrek.co/2023/12/15/biden-wants-all-government-employees-to-rent-evs-take-trains/
There is no train. Now what?
Bookmark.
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