I'm not ready to make the switch to EV or total electric although it does sound appealing. Weaning us Yanks off of cheap gas is a long and slow process and the infrastructure just isn't there (yet, it's improving) to be assured that you can find a charging station within your typical 200 mile range. The CR-V has a typical 400 mile range on a tank of fuel and I know once I get to a quarter tank just up the road will be a gas station and I don't even have to think about it. Not so with all electric.
I’m not jumping yet either. I know the state of our electricity grid here and the inability for it to scale to the requirements of sudden increase in electric vehicles with the impending end of life of a big chunk of our generation capacity. Plus there’s still retards vandalising the chargers near me
This is still very early days especially for large political statements like ending all production of certain vehicles within ten years.
Really the only thing we can scale is less transportation and vehicle use looking forwards.
I've been having the electric vehicle debate as well since my truck is coming due for a lot of costly work or it's going up for replacement. I don't need a big truck anymore, I can rent something when I absolutely must have the carrying capacity, so I'm going to be replacing it with something much smaller if replacement is what ends up happening. What I suspect is going to happen is the next vehicle is going to be internal combustion and then the one after that is going to be electric.
The cost of electricity in Ontario has been a political football. Volumes could be written about what's been done with that and how that's gotten out of hand over the last 20 years. Then if you go look at this website
https://live.gridwatch.ca/home-page.html at pretty much any time, nuclear is carrying the vast majority of the load here. That nuclear infrastructure is not new and some of it's quite old, and eventually it's going to have to be retired but there's no plan for replacement capacity.
There are two other strikes against electric vehicles. Contrary to popular belief, there's a lot more to Canada than the Greater Toronto Area (Huh, what? You mean there's stuff north of Bloor St?). Here, EV infrastructure, travel distance, and winter aren't too bad. Head north, winter is a lot more severe, the EV infrastructure is a lot more sparse, hell in many places infrastructure period is a lot more sparse, and winter can be vicious. You can drive for hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of KM in places and there'll be signs by the side of the road saying "Last gas for ...km". Forget charging stations. Then add reduced cold temperature battery performance in winter. There's no EV equivalent of keeping a jerry can or two in the trunk in case of running low in the middle of nowhere that I know of.
I totally agree, the political pronouncements are optimistic. Well intended but optimistic.