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Comment Re:Fire! Fire! (Score 1) 51

Then you've just not looked at that many reports. Here's guidelines for covered car parks from the UK government commissioned from Arup, an engineering group. It has a whole section on frequency, and none of the data are from the source you mention; they're from the UK and Norway instead, and focused on vehicles on the road.

https://assets.publishing.serv...

Are you *really* trying to claim that it's just a myth that EVs have lower fire rates than ICE vehicles? Is that truly a hill you're going to die on?

Comment Re:I have to wonder... (Score 1) 42

I think we’re not actually disagreeing on much here. My figures were based on 1.2 to 1.5tn of domestic spend and 0.22 of international spend, hence 6 to 1.

Sure, international tourism is way, way less important than domestic tourism or inflation. I just don’t think it’s nothing, especially given regional concentrations. And I neither think that the greater marginal impact of international tourism compared to domestic is good nor bad, it just is what it is. It’s a description, rather than a moral judgement. Policy choices that will be affected by that fact can be good or bad, eg “let’s make ourselves attractive or unattractive to the outside world”.

Comment Re: Europe isn't that big (Score 1) 118

Ha! I’d love to know which parts of this he considers impossible due to an immutable law of nature in Canada, because this is what he responded to, to say “it doesn’t work that way here”:

“Everyone gets to shop and park and charge wherever they like. They may pay a premium for combining those, or they may pay a discount. Depends on how the supermarket and charger companies decide they want to run their businesses.

When I go to see my son in Durham, I have a choice of a hotel with a charger in its car park, a hotel with a charger on the street outside its car park, or other hotels without charging and using chargers en route. I choose the hotel with the parking & charging on the street outside because it’s the best hotel out of a very uninspiring selection. And sometimes I charge at the hotel and sometimes en route. Lots of options, and it doesn’t really matter, the car can manage whichever way I do it.”

Comment Re:I have to wonder... (Score 2) 42

Arithmetically kinda sorta true, a 6 to 1 ratio, but economically misleading. Most obviously, international tourists bring new money to the US, it's an export business. Domestic tourism is reallocation of spending that would have largely happened anyway. Domestic tourism is also a stable business and slow-growing, whereas international is much more flighty and prone to disruption. On the margin, it drives more growth or loss in employment and other economic impacts than domestic demand. Put these together and this is why it becomes important: if domestic tourism slumps 10%, the US doesn't lose 120bn, and most of that spending still occurs anyway, but if international tourism slumps 10%, the US really does lose 22bn. And it's actually slumped more than that, and that's not chump change even given the US's giant GDP. Especially given that the spend is geographically concentrated, so particular markets are hit harder.

Comment Re: Europe isn't that big (Score 1) 118

I’ve been driving EVs for the last 10 years. These are things you’re scared of, not me. I’ve never come close to running out of charge in all that time, even back when I had a car that could only do 70 miles in the winter.

Everyone gets to shop and park and charge wherever they like. They may pay a premium for combining those, or they may pay a discount. Depends on how the supermarket and charger companies decide they want to run their businesses.

When I go to see my son in Durham, I have a choice of a hotel with a charger in its car park, a hotel with a charger on the street outside its car park, or other hotels without charging and using chargers en route. I choose the hotel with the parking & charging on the street outside because it’s the best hotel out of a very uninspiring selection. And sometimes I charge at the hotel and sometimes en route. Lots of options, and it doesn’t really matter, the car can manage whichever way I do it.

Comment Re: Europe isn't that big (Score 2) 118

You don’t have to pay to park, you do have to pay to charge. Just like, ya know, you pay to refuel at a supermarket, they don’t give the fuel away for free. And supermarkets will still not need to install chargers at every parking space in 25 years when the transition is complete, because that will still mean supply massively outstripping demand.

For the UK
- 34m cars
- 30% can’t be charged at the home, so 10m
- Average time between charges is 10 days
- Therefore, 1m public charges a day
- There are several million supermarket parking spaces in the UK, so supply would massively outstrip demand if all were fitted with chargers
- This is all the more so when we account for the many other places where chargers are installed, from lamp-posts to on street to service stations to worksites, etc.

Comment Re:money (Score 2) 118

Loads of people around my area have a Taycan or a Macan. A few have an ICE second car, but by and large, the second car of choice appears to be an i3. I personally have always thought it was ugly and impractical and preferred my old Zoe as a small car. But people are brand snobs and prefer BMWs to Renaults if they’ve got the money. No judgement — it applies to me too, I traded up to a Mercedes when I could.

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