The Timaru Herald

A plug for the pleasure

What has our year in an electric BMW been like – and what does the Kiwi EV landscape look like for 2019? David Linklater reports.

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Twenty eighteen is over and done with and so is our time with the BMW i3. The white car you see here is one of two we’ve run as long-term test vehicles back-to-back. The first was a fully loaded i3s; this one’s a more humble entry-level model, with slightly less power and more comfort-oriented suspension. But still not exactly basic transport at $77,200.

Both were battery electric vehicle (BEV) versions of the i3; no fossil fuel for us, thanks.

If you’d told me five years ago that I’d spend 2018 in a pure-electric car as daily transport, that would have been hard to get my head around. As would the fact that we here at Stuff Motoring have road-tested 10 different EVs this year.

It was interestin­g to have been part of what’s been a very big conversati­on happening around EVs in New Zealand in 2018; they were a hot topic.

It’s partly due to the novelty of this relatively new technology, climate change and volatile fossil fuel prices, but stories about plug-in cars were keenly read and opinions plentifull­y expressed.

For my part, I’m on board. I loved having an i3 as ‘‘my’’ car – with its exotic carbon fibre reinforced plastic constructi­on and rear-drive configurat­ion, it feels like a proper driver-centric BMW.

The range is modest at around 200km (real-world, based on our average power consumptio­n on test) but fairly typical of vehicles of this type.

Newer models from this and other brands will have bigger and better batteries (Hyundai’s new Kona Electric easily cracks 400km, for example), but I don’t really buy into the argument that range is a huge drawback.

Average mileage for a Kiwi motorist is still less than 200km per week, so an EV could suit most of the people most of the time.

You do have to think differentl­y about fuelling – sorry, I mean charging. You ‘‘graze’’, plugging in whenever possible, instead of draining the tank and then filling when it’s empty like you do with a petrol car.

I mostly used DC fast chargers during my time with the i3, because they could get the vehicle pretty well powered up in half an hour. I rapidly (excuse the pun) went off the free chargers being supplied by some power companies in my area, because the behaviour of other users sometimes made visiting them an unpleasant experience. People get weird when they’re waiting for their turn to get free stuff.

So I tended to charge at a paid DC station (about $15 per 200km) or at home (slower, but roughly $6/200km). Any way you look at it you’re winning on running cost, because EVs don’t pay road user charges and won’t until at least 2021.

The charging infrastruc­ture is actually pretty good now too (although there’s much more to come). You genuinely can drive New Zealand tip-to-tail in an EV, providing you do a little planning.

So why isn’t everybody running to buy an EV? Progress is being made – for the past five years, EV registrati­ons have doubled each year (the national fleet comprised just 229 plug-in vehicles in 2013). But the

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 ??  ?? There are plenty of high-end glamour EVs coming in 2019 - like the Jaguar I-Pace.
There are plenty of high-end glamour EVs coming in 2019 - like the Jaguar I-Pace.
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