When I was travelling in the third world about 25 years ago one of the locals was telling me how, unlike developed countries, everyone who could afford it had to buy a generator to produce power when the grid couldn't.
Yeah.
Reliable power is just so 20th century. Probably fascist too.
> They were workers from Hyundai which were setting up a battery plant and EV manufacturing plant in Georgia who were there to oversee the construction and the training of American workers
And presumably didn't bother to get visas?
They seem to have dropped a lot in the UK as well if the Youtube video I watched the other day was showing real numbers.
Though much of the problem may be that most working people there simply can't afford any kind of new car any more. They have to be on welfare to buy one.
"He who does not work shall not eat" - Lenin
I now pay for high-speed Internet so I can sit waiting for 20 seconds for Cloudflare to "check I'm human" when I click on a link.
Technology destroying their 'security system' sounds like a good thing to me.
If you follow the technology, right now production of hydrogen by electrolysis is slow, inefficient, and relies on expensive catalysts.
So you admit the article identifies a source; you simply dismissed it because you think it will not work.
"A car is just a big purse on wheels." -- Johanna Reynolds