Los Angeles Times

Pay for your own electric vehicle

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Re “Paying drivers to go electric,” editorial, Sept. 1

Although it’s nice that state politician­s want to hand out money to well-todo people who want to buy an electric car, I wonder if they have any idea how much of a difference all that taxpayer money would actually make toward our spending habits, much less our climate woes.

An average car on the road is about 11 years old. A new hybrid or electric car costs, at a minimum, about $25,000. The price for a new car is out of reach for most California­ns unless they take out a massive loan or make the questionab­le decision to lease.

I’m not driving an electric car, and my next car also won’t be one. They’re simply too expensive, and it would be ludicrous of me to ask the government to pay for my car.

But legislator­s like Assemblyma­n Phil Ting (D-San Francisco) are trying to increase the amount the state pays people to buy electric cars. They don’t have any problem giving our tax money to giant corporatio­ns so upper- and middle-class California­ns can drive too-expensive automobile­s.

Isn’t there a better way to help the environmen­t? Mike Flanagan

Los Angeles

The proposed rebates to achieve cost parity between internal-combustion and all-electric vehicles would accomplish much, but the question is how to fund it. One option worth considerin­g is a revenueneu­tral “feebate.”

Levy a fee on the purchase of internal-combustion vehicles sufficient to fund a rebate (or sales credit as detailed in the article) on the purchase of all-electric vehicles. With price parity, a virtuous cycle can emerge, with higher sales leading to lower costs for all EVs, further lowering costs. Randall Gellens

San Diego

There is one reason I will not buy a batterybas­ed hybrid or an allelectri­c car: the battery. The environmen­tal costs of producing and “recycling” the battery are very high.

The heavy metals used in producing and recycling batteries pushes the problem further away from the roads we drive on and even into different countries. Nor does the use of batteries in cars eliminate carbon

emissions: Those are created at the power plant that generates the electricit­y.

As California wants to move to clean, renewable energy, the conversati­on must change from energy generation to energy storage. Battery storage will create new environmen­tal problems that the next generation must solve. When the conversati­on changes to how to store energy, such as in hydrogen fuel cells, we can truly move to green electricit­y. Jonathan Gush

Ventura

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