I don't think so. The comparitive costs for electric vehicles are skewed at the moment.Blind groper wrote: Just the one response here.
I note that there is, today, a whole range of electric cars entering the market. The cost of running an electric car, in terms of 'fuel' (electricity for recharge) is very much less than petroleum products. New technologies, due to be introduced way before 2050, should permit great range and rapid recharge of such cars.
So, do you not think, MM, that this factor would alter your above prediction?
Certainly in the UK.
The price of petrol and diesel is nearly all tax. Electricity is virtually tax-free in comparison.
And yet electric vehicles are still not economic. Only very slow, short distance, stop-start applications make sense. And if you put the same tax on electric, as on fossil, nobody would ever buy an electric vehicle.
And it's true that they have improved performance, but at a big price.
And petrol engines have also improved, and they've got relatively cheaper.
In the end, you have to generate the power. Either at a power station, or in the car's engine.
And the price of fossil fuels affects both fairly equally so I can't see why the balance should change.