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Sticks plus carrots: How realistic is Biden’s electric-car target?

The Biden administration is seeking a dramatic leap in electric vehicle sales, through proposed tougher tailpipe emission standards announced Wednesday. In effect, the administration is calling for two-thirds of new car sales to be EVs by 2032, up from less than 6% last year.

The proposed emission standards will test how much a major governmental push can transform the marketplace for a complex and costly product that Americans typically rely on every day.

Why We Wrote This

With electric vehicles accounting for only about 6% of current new car sales in the United States, a Biden target of about two-thirds by 2032 may sound unrealistic. But experts don’t see it as an impossible reach.

Already, several major automakers have set goals of making EVs 40% to 50% of their new-car sales in the United States by 2030. Even before Wednesday’s announcement, BloombergNEF was projecting that 52% of all U.S. new car sales would be EVs by 2030, thanks to federal legislation that extended federal subsidies for EV sales.

“There’s a lot of momentum already. And what you see happening is the government trying to ensure that what the automakers said they’re going to do actually happens,” says Kenneth Gillingham, professor of energy and environmental economics at Yale University.

But the new EV sticker prices are high, and some industry analysts warn of regulation-driven price hikes that could slow consumers’ appetite for new cars: electric and conventional.

On Saturday, Paul Collins finished his first long-distance road trip in his year-and-a-half-old Tesla. “It was amazingly easy. Convenient,” he says of the 2,800-mile round trip from his Wellesley, Massachusetts, home to Florida and back again.

The software told him not only the available charging stations along his route, but also the number of chargers available and the restaurants and other amenities around. He didn’t even have to pull out a credit card when he plugged in. The charger automatically identified his car, and Tesla automatically billed him.

He says he’s not concerned about the dramatic leap in electric vehicle sales that the Biden administration is seeking, through proposed tougher tailpipe emission standards announced Wednesday. In effect, the administration is calling for two-thirds of new car sales to be EVs by 2032, up from less than 6% last year. “I might have said before I bought this EV that it might seem impractical,” says Mr. Collins, manager of an investment company. “Having made this road trip, it feels quite practical.”

Why We Wrote This

With electric vehicles accounting for only about 6% of current new car sales in the United States, a Biden target of about two-thirds by 2032 may sound unrealistic. But experts don’t see it as an impossible reach.

Mary Beermann isn’t so sure. When she needed a new car, the Valparaiso, Indiana, retiree took a hard look at EVs. She visited several dealerships and even went to a car show in Chicago to check them out. But after friends sent her articles about the risks of EV batteries catching fire and problems disposing of the batteries once they’re used up, she decided last fall to buy a conventional Mazda instead.

“I was pretty happy with my decision,” she says. “It doesn’t mean I wouldn’t ever have [an EV].” She’s waiting for the technology to mature.

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