The new CARB rules state that no more that 20% of sales can PHEV by 2035. And those PHEVs need at least 50 miles of electric range so most daily driving will be in EV mode.
Government mandates like this need to be realistic and give industry time to accommodate or they will just plain fail. A 2027 mandate would be impossible as it takes more than 5 years to design a new drivetrain from scratch.
it does not take more than 5 years as I have a friend who works in Fords drivetrain development division in Europe. This of course on the assumption that they don’t design a new combustion engine to go with it (and no-one should be designing new combustions at this rage in the game).
In any case it does not take 13 years and cars with sufficient battery range should arrive in the market now well before 2035.
Believe you me, with the risk of loss of access to the California market car companies will get off their *** and move quicker.
That said, this rule should have been announced a couple of years ago. It is too little too late.
13 years from now they should all be full battery electric. There is no reason to still be selling PHEVs in 2035.
I’d be happy with a sliding scale on the range between now and 2030 but no way should ICE vehicles be on the market in California in 2035.
I was a big fan of the Volt but that was years ago. There was need for such a vehicle back the due to the cost of batteries and a lack of infrastructure. Now that need is debatable but with the way the market is going already by 2035 they are not needed.
Car companies who can’t make it by then will and should be replaced by those that can, including vehicles from China. No attempt should be made to prop up those who caught this every step of the way. Good bye and good riddance to them.