It's hard to respond to this without writing a long essay, because it's a complicated mille-feuille (word chosen advisedly) of consumer sentiment, infrastructure investment, lobbying, entrenched interests and so on which reaches very deeply into many expensive corners of the economy. And we have to separate Europe from the US because they are very different markets with very different governance, very different purported goals, and thought processes. They may converge someday, but they are very divergent today. Practically speaking, there was a crest to the electrification wave (policy wise) a few years ago and that crest has passed and we are in a slump. In the US, consumers largely remain skeptical about electric-first personal transportation, and in any case they prefer vehicles that are the worst candidates for electrification. (they don't NEED such vehicles, they just want them). On the political side, it has become apparent that the deadline for "promises we made for someone else to deal with in the future" has approached so closely that people today feel they might actually have to deal with the impact of it. After all, if we can make no more gasoline engines after 2035, when should we lay off the engineering staff? 2034 seems too late. Maybe 2026?