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The new year began with a barrage of negative EV headlines. But beneath the headlines lie stories of continued market growth for electric cars, trucks, and buses. While some legacy automakers are struggling to adapt to designing, manufacturing, and selling electric vehicles, and some start-up electric vehicle makers are going out of business, such turmoil is natural in a technological transition of this magnitude and should be expected, not sensational.

Still, in 2023, consumers bought over 1.4 million new passenger EVs, which averages nearly 1 out of every 10 new cars sold nationwide. Charging infrastructure deployment has been growing steadily, from around 90,000 plugs at the beginning of 2020 to over 180,000 at the end of 2023. Investments in electric vehicle manufacturing, battery production, and supply chain in the Southeast U.S. alone were up 45% in 2023, bringing the total to $70.8 billion and 70,000 anticipated jobs.

To get a true sense of how the transition to electric cars, trucks, and buses is going, pay attention to the stories of the people buying and driving EVs, long-term adoption trends, and where private sector investments and public funds are flowing. Below are a few examples.

The Cold Hard Facts: EVs in Winter Weather

Despite recent icy headlines, new data actually show that EVs outshine gasoline vehicles in extreme cold. In fact, Havre, Montana—a rural frontier community just south of the Canadian border— has been operating their electric school buses in as low as minus 44 degrees without fail, sometimes better than their diesel buses. And they’re doing so at a much lower price tag—Havre’s electric school buses cost 50%-75% less to operate than the diesel alternatives. Read more.

One Harve Public School's electric school buses

Photo courtesy of Havre Daily News/Patrick Johnston

On A Roll: EV Sales More Than Quadruple

EV sales continue to charge ahead, having more than quadrupled between 2020 to 2023. This period of rapid growth has seen Americans purchase 4.7 million EVs, illustrating the continued satisfaction among early EV adopters, despite a lack of model availability and reliable EV charging. I’ll wager that, as NEVI-funded fast chargers pop up every 50 miles along America’s highways, and new and used EV tax credit confusion settles, the next million EVs will be sold before the end of Q2 of this year. Read more.

Graph showing EV sales

Graphic courtesy of energy.gov

Swapping Yellow for Green: Electric School Bus Funding

Another $1 billion in clean school buses has been awarded with funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. These grants will allow 280 school districts to purchase 2,700 clean school buses, primarily electric, to replace dirty diesel buses. Clean school buses save school districts money long-term through reduced fuel and maintenance costs, improve public health, boost resilience by having the potential to provide backup power to buildings and the grid, address the climate crisis, and enhance energy security. Read more.

Rows of electric school buses

Photo courtesy of The Washington Post

Want to join the EV conversation? Let’s connect on LinkedIn!

SACE’s Electrify the South program leverages research, advocacy, and outreach to accelerate the equitable transition to electric transportation across the Southeast. Visit ElectrifytheSouth.org to learn more and connect with us.

The post Greening Our Roads: Talking EVs appeared first on SACE | Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.

Greening Our Roads: Talking EVs

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Renewable Energy

Could Obama Pass a Cognitive Test?

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Not sure about this.

A magna cum laude graduate of Harvard Law School might struggle to identify a bear. Could be.

This is the intelligence level of the American electorate today.

Could Obama Pass a Cognitive Test?

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Renewable Energy

Big Win for Those Incapable of Elementary School Math

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The Chinese ownership of American farmland is less than 0.00036, or 0.036%.  To put this into perspective, if the entirety of U.S. farmland were reduced to one acre, the Chinese government and business interests would own less than 15 square feet, about half the size of a small broom closet.

Yet, true to form, this is a huge issue for the MAGA base.

Big Win for Those Incapable of Elementary School Math

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Renewable Energy

Social Justice and Despotism?

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This guy is quite effective in talking to uneducated, conservative Americans, most of whom have never traveled to, or even read anything about the happiest countries on Earth.

If I were going to make a statement about the relationship between social justice and despotism, I would at least consider the lives of the people in places that consider social justice to be something of importance, and compare/contrast this to the list of the countries that are perennially at the top of the World Happiness Rankings.

What makes the people in New Zealand, Iceland, Costa Rica, Northern Europe, etc., so happy?  Why do these are these nations suffer exactly zero despotism?

I would be completely ashamed of myself if I were to forward a political theory that had precisely no basis in fact.

Social Justice and Despotism?

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