it made their decision artificially easier by having the benefit of not having to pay even more. (/s). Just kidding (about the benefit but not the intent of the tariff), they are a terrible idea.So consumers benefit (?) from high car prices on other brands but pay same price for the Tesla. Where is the benefit?
So consumers benefit (?) from high car prices on other brands but pay same price for the Tesla. Where is the benefit?
if you think ALL the parts inside a Tesla are made in America then you’re delusional. They’ll be impacted as well.this benefits consumers because adding an artificial tax to other brands that tesla won't have will cause tesla car pricing to be more attractive (relatively) in an effort to shore-up tesla sales, which otherwise left unprotected are declining. and, because teslas are purchase by consumers, this move therefore benefits consumers immediately by having them incented to purchase said brand and benefitting from that that they did not have to purchase a competitive brand. QED (/s)
One thing I'm not clear on for Tesla or Lucid is where the critical battery minerals come from and will those raw materials be tariffed?
yes tesla will be impacted but much less than the others (which is probably why tesla and lucid stocks are both up by about 2% today as of a half hour ago). my question in the post was only about the battery raw materials which I assume for all EV battery manufacturers in the US are from sources outside the US.if you think ALL the parts inside a Tesla are made in America then you’re delusional. They’ll be impacted as well.
I agree with much of what you said but I don't think you can blame the labor unions for the decline of the American auto. Unions are stronger in Germany but BMW, Mercedes and Audi are thriving. Labor unions weren't responsible for the Cimarron. For years the Ford Escape was pretty indistinguishable from its Lincoln version. Nor were the unions responsible for the Chevy Vega, the Ford Pinto, the American Motors Gremlin and, let us not forget, the Pontiac Aztek. Hyundai, Kia, Toyota and Honda are still making sedans while Ford, GM and Dodge walk away from them but American automakers haven't figured out how to make money off smaller production lines. Again, not the fault of the unions.I am old enough to remember the days when American-built cars were largely insulated from competition from outside the U.S., not specifically by government policy but more by American consumer hubris about the superiority of American products.
In the final two decades of that period -- the 1960's and 1970's -- American cars fell off a cliff in terms of engineering and build quality. Car companies became more focused on stock prices and replaced the engineers who once dominated the C-suites with people from the financial side. Labor unions, thinking the American car market was safely self-contained within our shores, used whipsaw bargaining among the Big Three to obtain pay and benefit packages well out of step with unions in other big industries. And cars just got junkier and junkier, ultimately resulting in over-priced, under-engineered excrescences such as the Cadillac Cimarron.
The oil crisis of the early 1970's began the process of snapping us out of this morass, as American consumers finally started paying attention to what was going on in Japan and Europe, where engineering and efficiency remained more in the forefront of auto making. This ushered in the era when Japanese cars became the quality and value standard for the mass U.S. market, and Mercedes, BMW, and Porsche became the luxury and engineering standards for the premium market.
It wasn't until U.S. buyers finally found themselves in a global market that the American automakers got serious again about engineering, quality, and value -- a process that took around thirty years to bear lasting fruit.
Taking the long view of things, American consumers always ultimately benefit from being in global markets. The jingoistic view that the best engineering and manufacturing is done only in the U.S. should be left in the grave where it belongs. When we put our minds to it, we can compete successfully with anybody. What we can no longer do as we did for a few decades after World War II, no matter what current political thinking claims, is dominate and monopolize.
I, for one, am not looking forward to an American auto industry -- or a labor union environment -- hiding behind tariff protections.
I agree with much of what you said but I don't think you can blame the labor unions for the decline of the American auto.
And until more attention is paid to the 'contributions' of China & India, it makes little difference what happens here. Reading comments on issues like this make it appear that only the U.S. is responsible for environmental issues.Oh well, Humans have had a good run on this planet.
I didn't say "Americans", I said "humans". Last time I looked I think that included residents of China and India.And until more attention is paid to the 'contributions' of China & India, it makes little difference what happens here. Reading comments on issues like this make it appear that only the U.S. is responsible for environmental issues.
What makes you think we haven’t done a thing?
I did not single you out, hence my comment "reading issues on comments like this...". The comment was one applicable to the tone on this site, not yours.I didn't say "Americans", I said "humans". Last time I looked I think that included residents of China and India.
There is nothing legally binding about the PCA nor is there any mechanism for enforcement. So you put far more faith in it than do I. Not as bad, but it reminds me of the failed mechanism we call the U.N."Haven't done" is the operative phrase here. Past tense.
The issue today is what we're going to do going forward. Call it TDS or anything else you like, but the facts are that we pulled out of the Paris Climate Accord; states such as Florida have passed legislation barring references to climate change in official documents (while surreptitiously increasing spending to combat sea level rise); EV incentives are being rolled back; EPA environmental regulations are being rolled back; government stimulus for clean energy development is being curtailed, accompanied by absurd propaganda about things such as wind farms; etc.
Meanwhile, oil-based economies such as Saudi Arabia's are facing reality and beginning to diversity away from fossil fuel dependency while we persist in poking our heads deeper into the sand.
There is nothing legally binding about the PCA nor is there any mechanism for enforcement. So you put far more faith in it than do I. Not as bad, but it reminds me of the failed mechanism we call the U.N.
As far as EV incentives are concerned, I can see both sides of the argument. EVs will take off on their own when issues such as their practicality for apartment dwellers, cold weather range issues, perceived range issues in general, charging infrastructure etc. are behind us. Currently they are not. After owning EVs from Tesla, Audi, BMW, Lucid & Genesis, I don't bury my head regarding issues that have nothing to do with incentives. And before giving too much credit to Saudi Arabia, their motives are essentially financial in nature. I don't think it's primarily a 'save the planet' motivation. Hedging their bets so to speak.
When you said, "Meanwhile, oil-based economies such as Saudi Arabia's are facing reality and beginning to diversity away from fossil fuel dependency while we persist in poking our heads deeper into the sand", I think the meaning was clear enough.I said nothing about Saudi Arabia's stance on climate issues. I said they were "beginning to diversify away from fossil fuel dependency", a clear reference to an economic motive, not an environmental one.
Symbolic moves matter in international affairs. Our pulling out of the Paris Climate Accord was meant to signal that we don't take climate change seriously in the U.S., particularly as it was done by a man who repeatedly claimed that climate change was a Chinese hoax and was doing what he could at the time to reinvigorate the moribund coal industry in the U.S. -- something that was dying of its own accord more for economic reasons than environmental ones.
As for things such as making EVs more practical for apartment dwellers, government has a long history of using public power and funding to develop infrastructure: things such as the Tennessee Valley Authority that brought rural electrification to the American south, protective monopolies that were granted for a period of time to utility and telephone companies to facilitate the development of power and telecommunications infrastructure, etc. Why isn't the government today using building codes to ensure new apartment and condo buildings are constructed with accommodations for home charging of EVs? Building codes in many regions dictate wind and energy ratings of building components and sometimes get as granular as dictating the configuration and spacing of framing nails. They also dictate the minimum electrical supply levels of a building, based on the anticipated power needs of inhabitants. Why aren't building codes evolving to recognize EV charging in that calculation?
I'll give you the last word as I know you must have it.
Yes the premium/luxury segment in the West has disallowed them. Even though there are a ton in Asia and the Chinese EV makers all have uber lux MPVs.A number of years ago Mercedes tried to create a "minivan" that opened like and looked like a non raised wagon: the R series. They made it from 2006 to 2012:
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Mercedes-Benz R-Class - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
They sold so few that they became unicorns. A buddy of mine bought a used one a about seven years ago so I found myself looking for others. In a year or so of looking I think I saw one.
Mercedes gave up on the idea and I don't think anyone else has tried it since.
Two contrasting trends are intersecting here. one is what you are proposing -- requiring EVSEs or at least hookups for them in new apartment construction. But the contrasting trend is to reduce the size of parking garages to encourage more mass transit, travel on demand (cabs, Uber, Waymo, bike riding, walking) and less congestion. And these changes are also made through zoning laws.As for things such as making EVs more practical for apartment dwellers, government has a long history of using public power and funding to develop infrastructure: things such as the Tennessee Valley Authority that brought rural electrification to the American south, protective monopolies that were granted for a period of time to utility and telephone companies to facilitate the development of power and telecommunications infrastructure, etc. Why isn't the government today using building codes to ensure new apartment and condo buildings are constructed with accommodations for home charging of EVs? Building codes in many regions dictate wind and energy ratings of building components and sometimes get as granular as dictating the configuration and spacing of framing nails. They also dictate the minimum electrical supply levels of a building, based on the anticipated power needs of inhabitants. Why aren't building codes evolving to recognize EV charging in that calculation?