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    HomeBusinessPlenty of roadblocks for carmakers seeking electric vehicles' success

    Plenty of roadblocks for carmakers seeking electric vehicles’ success

    NEW YORK (AFP) – The world’s top automakers – motivated either by governmental regulations or pure profit – have made a sharp turn away from fossil fuel vehicles. But there are plenty of obstacles on the road to a future full of eco-friendly cars.

    Will there be enough lithium and other vital raw materials to make electric car batteries? Will there be sufficient charging stations? How will carmakers ensure that their offerings are affordable for the average driver?

    Following the success of Elon Musk’s Tesla, built solely on electric vehicles, most of the biggest names in the sector are planning to invest tens of billions of dollars to reorient their businesses toward clean energy.

    Stellantis, the world’s fifth-largest automaker, plans to sell only electric cars in Europe by 2030. Toyota expects to release about 30 electric models in that same timeframe. GM hopes to stop making cars with combustion engines by 2035.

    These corporate ambitions have dovetailed with efforts by national and local governments to go green.

    On Thursday (Aug 25), California announced that from 2035, all new cars sold in the Golden State – the most populous in America – must be zero-emission.

    The European Union also has taken steps to ban the sale of gas- or diesel-fueled cars – and even hybrids – by 2035, while China wants at least half of all new cars to be electric, plug-in hybrid or hydrogen-powered by that time.

    Automakers are on notice that “they are going to have to figure out how to put cars on the market,” said Ms Jessica Caldwell, executive director of insights for the automotive research firm Edmunds.

    “We used to say that the challenges for electric vehicles would be consumer acceptance and price,” she added.

    With car buyers increasingly attuned to the environment and the woes of climate change, selling the concept of electric vehicles is no longer an issue.

    In the United States, General Motors says it has more than 150,000 pre-orders for the electric version of its Silverado pickup truck, which will be available next year. The wait time for a Tesla these days is several months.

    For Ms Caldwell, the bigger issue now is whether automakers “can get the raw materials” they need to make the cars.

    Mr Karl Brauer, an executive analyst for used car search engine iseecars.com, agrees, saying that no matter what government incentives are offered for would-be buyers of electric vehicles, the rare elements needed may simply be unavailable.

    “Right now, we have a lack of palladium, and nickel, and lithium. Everything you need to build an electric car is harder to get than it was six or 12 months ago,” he told AFP.

    The supply issue is linked partly to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine six months ago.

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