BoJo really has gone all-in on the EV drive in the UK, probably the only thing of merit he has managed to preside over during his tenure as PM. Most other EU countries are heading in roughly the same direction with roughly the same timescales planned.
Regarding the future of EVs in the US: as the US will no longer be able to export ICE to Europe in as little as 10 years time there will be absolutely no choice but for US industry to go all out on electrification too, or they'll simply become isolated and ruin their export market completely - not that there was much of one anyway as US vehicles have always been very anachronistic and generally unwanted in the rest of the entire world, with oddly enough, the exception of Harley Davidson. H-D's also taking electrification more seriously than mostly every other manufacturer in the US bar Tesla: they have fundamentally understood what the problems and issues are and not tried to brush any of them under the carpet, unlike Zero, who are so depressingly lacking in self-reflection they just can't see their huge, huge glaring issues. Issues that certain other companies named after electrical entrepreneurs have seen, 10 years ago, and set out to simply solve without bullshit.
The reason Tesla is so successful is because they looked at the problems with EVs, and they didn't hand-wavy it all away or pretend it's not like that or "you're using it wrongly" or make literally any excuses at all for being not as good as ICE vehicles. That's why today they charge in minutes, they can be updated over-the-air, they have insane range, the drivetrain and battery reliability is enviably good even compared to the best ICE brands, they work when it's cold, they work when it's hot, they can be charged repeatedly, and lordy are they fast. About the only place they're below par is build quality - but even then you don't get Tesla pretending there's no problem at all... they fix it. See the recent fiasco with Model 3 rear bumpers falling off in puddles, or the new addition of the heat pump to the 3, etc. Not without faults - but not without fixes.
In the meantime:
- Zero releases firmware so broken that they self-cripple their entire premium range. Imagine if Tesla did that.
- Zero continues to release bikes that just stop working in the rain. Imagine if Tesla did that.
- Zero continues to pretend that charging is not The Single Biggest Issue with EVs, releasing bikes with a hopelessly slow AC OBC that breaks so reliably and regularly that you wonder why there's not been a class action suit to have them fixed as a known design issue, and no DCFC capability at all, wtf
- Zero also refuses to acknowledge that their belt drive isn't strong enough or protected enough from damage.
- H-D made such an incredible first attempt it's a shame they saw fit to include such a feeble AC OBC with something that costs over half as much as a Model 3, almost like they needed to figure out some way to cripple it so they could release a better one in two years or something
- At £30k no-one really cares anyway because only 5 people in the UK can afford one
- Energica are ... well actually they seem to be doing it right, just still too heavy and still too pricey.
The problems remain... price, range, charging, weight, reliability. All of which need to change by about a factor of two to reach parity with ICE. The driving market will be the rest of the world rather than the US most likely. Every one of the Japanese manufacturers is already deep into development of EV motorcycles, and the rest of Asia is already on the case too, kicking out usable and useful machines at affordable prices (Super Soco TC Max? Don't mind if I do, plz!)
Cas