I am still quite skeptical that anything powered by coal is cleaner, let alone has lower CO2 emissions.
Why? EVs are about 3.5x as efficient at using energy as gasmobiles. Plus, burning gasoline has two stages of CO2 emissions: First the emissions from the refinery turning crude oil into gasoline, and second burning it in the car. EVs don't really need to be that much more efficient than gasmobiles to have lower well-to-wheel emissions!
Furthermore, most EV charging is done at night, using mostly base load power plants, which would be run day and night even if there were no EVs to charge, because base load power plants are more efficient when run at a steady rate day and night. So, the amount of electricity actually used to charge EVs is not really a true reflection of the amount of CO2 emissions from power plants which are used to charge them. It's actually better than the numbers indicate.
Another way that EVs are actually cleaner (and produce less CO2) on average than the numbers indicate, is all the EV owners who have home solar power installations. I've seen it claimed that as many as 30% of
BEV owners have such installations. That's probably an older number, and I would guess it's lower now that EV sales are starting to really take off. But still, the actual average is even better than studies indicate, because they ignore how much "cleaner" power is from home solar installations.