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The price you mention is "with incentives" meaning there's a subsidy involved. Also, what is the Leaf's payload/size/capability versus a hybrid? it can't compete.
The Nissan Leaf electric car will cost $32,780, add in the federal EV tax credit, and the bottom line is $25,280, add in various state tax credits, and in states like California, it could get as low as $20,280. The Leaf is about the size of a Prius, seats five, and has 100 mile range per charge. The cars also includes navigation, wireless bluetooth, and lots of other nice features. Even at $32,00, it's a pretty good deal, considering you'll never have to buy gasoline, oil changes, or tune-ups again.
Ford and several other manufacturers will be right on Nissan's heels next year with similar vehicles, and competition will only drive costs down.
Finally the electricity used to charge the batteries comes from somewhere. This has been studied many times. Every study shows that, even with coal, the carbon load is significantly less than burning gasoline in even the most efficient car. Add in anything better than coal, and you further reduce the load.
If you hate coal, there's nothing to stop you from putting up some solar panels or a windmill to charge your car with renewables. You'll always be Exxon's bitch as long as you burn gasoline, even in a hybrid, and if you burn biodiesel or ethanol, you'll either have to become a farmer or be Monsanto's bitch.
The electric car is a feel good vehicle for people who don't understand the full cost
Obviously, you've never owned an electric car.
I already own one, so please don't lecture me on costs and practicality, I know them well. In my experience, electric cars are much cheaper and more practical for urban driving (which is what most people do.) There's less maintenance, fewer parts to break down and they drive great.
But you are right in that it is a feel good vehicle. I smile every time I drive mine.
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