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How Norway Built An EV Utopia While The USA is Struggling To Go Electric

Posted: Thu Feb 22, 2024 7:29 pm
by Wave
How Norway Built An EV Utopia While The USA is Struggling To Go Electric

See more here:
https://www.canadaforums.ca/2024/02/how ... sa-is.html

See How Norway Built An EV Utopia While The USA is Struggling To Go Electric - CNBC Documentary.

CNBC on Youtube has the story.

Norway boasts the highest electric vehicle adoption rate in the world. 82% of new car sales were EVs in Norway in 2023. In comparison, 7.6% of new car sales were electric in the USA last year, according to Kelley Blue Book estimates. The Norwegian government started incentivizing the purchase of EVs back in the 1990s, but it wasn’t until Tesla and other EV models became available about ten years ago that sales really started to take off. Norway’s capital, Oslo, is also electrifying its ferries, buses, semi trucks and even construction equipment. Gas pumps and parking meters are being replaced by chargers. It’s an electric utopia of the future. CNBC flew across the globe to meet with experts, government officials and locals to find out how the Scandinavian country pulled off such a high EV adoption rate.

A so-called electric vehicle (EV) is a vehicle that uses one or more electric motors for propulsion. It can be powered by a collector system, with electricity from extravehicular sources, or it can be powered autonomously by a battery (sometimes charged by solar panels, or by converting fuel to electricity using a generator (often known as a hybrid) or fuel cells. EVs include but are not limited to road and rail vehicles, and broadly can also include electric boat and underwater vessels (submersibles, and technically also diesel- and turbo-electric submarines), electric aircraft and electric spacecraft.

Electric road vehicles surely include electric passenger cars, electric buses, electric trucks and personal transporters such as electric buggy, electric tricycles, electric bicycles and electric motorcycles/scooters. Together with other emerging automotive technologies such as autonomous driving, connected vehicles and shared mobility, EVs form a future vision of transportation called Connected, Autonomous, Shared and Electric (CASE) mobility.

Early electric vehicles first came into existence in the late 19th century, when the Second Industrial Revolution brought forth electrification. Using electricity was among the preferred methods for motor vehicle propulsion as it provides a level of quietness, comfort and ease of operation that could not be achieved by the gasoline engine cars of the time, but range anxiety due to the limited energy storage offered by contemporary battery technologies hindered any mass adoption of private electric vehicles throughout the 20th century. Internal combustion engines (both gasoline and diesel engines) were the dominant propulsion mechanisms for cars and trucks for about 100 years, but electricity-powered locomotion remained commonplace in other vehicle types, such as overhead line-powered mass transit vehicles like electric trains, trams, monorails and trolley buses, as well as various small, low-speed, short-range battery-powered personal vehicles such as mobility scooters. Hybrid electric vehicles, where electric motors are used as a supplementary propulsion to internal combustion engines, became more widespread in the late 1990s. Plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, where electric motors can be used as the predominant propulsion rather than a supplement, did not see any mass production until the late 2000s, and battery electric cars did not indeed become practical options for the consumer market until the 2010s.

Government incentives to increase technology adoption were indeed first introduced by Norway in 1990, followed by larger markets in the 2000s, including in the United States and the European Union, leading to a growing market for vehicles in the 2010s. Increasing public interest and awareness and structural incentives, such as those being built into the green recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, are expected to greatly increase the electric vehicle market. During the COVID-19 pandemic, lockdowns reduced the number of greenhouse gases in gasoline or diesel vehicles. The International Energy Agency has stated that governments should do more to meet climate goals, including policies for heavy electric vehicles. A total of 14% of all new cars sold were electric in 2022, up from 9% in 2021 and less than 5% in 2020. Electric vehicle sales may increase from 1% of the global share in 2016 to more than 35% by 2030. As of July 2022 the global EV market size was $280 billion and was expected to grow to $1 trillion by 2026. Much of this growth is expected in markets like North America, Europe, and China; a 2020 literature review suggested that growth in the use of four-wheeled electric vehicles appears economically unlikely in developing economies, but growth in electric two-wheeler and three-wheeler is likely. At more than 20%, two/three-wheelers are already the most electrified road transport segment today, and are projected to continue being the largest EV fleet among all transport modes. Bloomberg reports that in 2023, 292,423,403 bicycles and tricycles sold, representing 49% of the total market. The same report noted that 666,479 buses were sold, with 38% of the market (these are higher priced vehicles, so actual numbers are lower than the percentage of sales), 26,583,856 passenger cars at 14% of sales, and 965,442 vans and trucks with 3% of sales.

Electric vehicles exist around the world, such as:
- Electric car, a Mercedes-Benz EQS
- Electric aircraft, the Solar Impulse 2, which circumnavigated the globe
- Electric tram, a Wiener Linien ULF-B in Vienna, Austria
- Battery electric bus, a BYD bus in Landskrona, Sweden
- E-bike in Manhattan, New York City
- Electric truck, Class 8, a Tesla Semi in Rocklin, California
- Electric cart, an Italcar Attiva C2S.4
- Electric boat, the Tûranor PlanetSolar, the first solar-powered boat to circumnavigate the whole world

Re: How Norway Built An EV Utopia While The USA is Struggling To Go Electric

Posted: Tue Mar 05, 2024 5:36 am
by Japan
There are 2,531,206 electric vehicles on the road in the United States, including BEV and PHEV vehicles. Tesla, the longest operating electric car company in the US, sold 114,000 electric vehicles in the first quarter of 2022. They remain the most popular brand worldwide too.
https://www.insuranceopedia.com/auto-in ... -in-the-us

Electric cars account for 1% of vehicles on the road in the U.S., according to Experian Automotive's second quarter 2023 report.
https://www.edmunds.com/electric-car/ar ... in-us.html

Sales of Tesla Vehicles in the United States in 2022:
Vehicle Name Vehicle Type Year Introduced 2022 Sales
Model 3 Mass-market sedan 2017 240,266
Model S Luxury Liftback Sedan 2012 176,372
Model Y Compact crossover SUV 2019 120,737
Model X Luxury crossover SUV 2015 31,371
https://worldpopulationreview.com/count ... by-country

Over 80 percent of new cars sold in Norway were electric in 2023. New figures released by the Norwegian Road Federation say 82.4 percent of new cars sold in the country last year were electric, up from 79.3 percent in 2022.
https://www.theverge.com/2024/1/2/24022 ... ic-in-2023

Re: How Norway Built An EV Utopia While The USA is Struggling To Go Electric

Posted: Tue Mar 05, 2024 5:45 am
by Japan
Statistics

Sales, market, and usage share

Light-duty plug-in electric vehicle stock, market penetration, annual sales, and market share in the top selling countries and regional markets for latest available year

Country or region % of cars in use (2022)

Norway 27.73%
Sweden 8.8%
Netherlands 5.8%
China 4.9%
Germany 3.85%
California 3.85%
United Kingdom 2.8%
France 2.7%
Europe 2.4%
Canada 1.6%
United States 1.3%
Japan 0.6%

Global Total 2.1%

Read more here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_ ... by_country

Re: How Norway Built An EV Utopia While The USA is Struggling To Go Electric

Posted: Sun Mar 10, 2024 4:14 am
by Germ
What Canada can learn from Norway, the EV capital of the world

Read more here:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/climate/canada- ... -1.7092003

Canada's plan to end the sale of gasoline and diesel cars by 2035 has raised a multitude of questions about whether the country is up for the challenge, and what it would mean for drivers.

Norway is already well on its way to reaching that goal, with electric vehicles accounting for 82 per cent of all vehicles sold in 2023.

The country is aiming to become the first nation to end the sale of gasoline and diesel cars by 2025.

It's considered the world leader in EVs, with roughly one-quarter of all cars on the road now electric.

So, how did Norway get here? What have the challenges been? And what can Canada learn from its experience?

CBC News spoke to three experts, as well as a top official in the Norwegian government, to better understand the country's path.

Re: How Norway Built An EV Utopia While The USA is Struggling To Go Electric

Posted: Fri Mar 29, 2024 1:49 am
by Germ
Norway has a total area of 385,207 square kilometres and had a population of 5,488,984 in January 2023. The country shares a long eastern border with Sweden. It is bordered by Finland and Russia to the northeast and the Skagerrak strait to the south. Norway has an extensive coastline facing the North Atlantic Ocean and the Barents Sea. Harald V of the House of Glücksburg is the current King of Norway. Jonas Gahr Støre has been Prime Minister of Norway since 2021. As a unitary state with a constitutional monarchy, Norway divides state power between the parliament, the cabinet, and the supreme court, as determined by the 1814 constitution.

Re: How Norway Built An EV Utopia While The USA is Struggling To Go Electric

Posted: Tue Oct 01, 2024 9:00 pm
by xkhan

Re: How Norway Built An EV Utopia While The USA is Struggling To Go Electric

Posted: Sun Nov 03, 2024 8:21 pm
by xkhan
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