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You might be wondering why I’m writing a post about Electric Vehicles, popularly referred to as EVs, having just received my lastest diesel company car.

Joe Simpson has written a post over here about Renault’s advertising of its strategy to move towards affordable and usable electric cars in the next couple of years, and others have commented on the cleverness or otherwise of Renault’s campaign.

However, my concern comes from the short sentence that is seemingly overlooked,

Renault – and Ghosn – are under fire in the French press for focusing too much on these electric models that are still two years away, and hurting sales of the current range.

The potential move towards EVs is a step-change in cars, the first significant change in the basic fundamentals of the personal automobile in perhaps one hundred years. It’s a different technology, which will require a different national infrastructure to provide charging points instead of petrol stations, and it’s an infrastructure that will probably be completely independent of the current one. This is not like adding a separate diesel nozzle to existing petrol pumps. In the immediate future you’re not going to recharge an electric car in the five or so minutes it takes to refuel your current vehicle.

Where am I going with this?

This could be the CD to the turntable, the DVD player to the VHS video but with the car. It’s the same end – you travel at your own time and speed – but in a completely different format, and with a significantly larger cost to the end-user.

So, if Renault (and others) are successful with their electric vehicles what’s going to happen to the market for petrol and diesel cars? Who’s going to buy a current model knowing that they’ll be facing something like 100% depreciation in two to five years?

If EVs take off, the market for petrol and diesel vehicles is likely to crash very quickly in the same way that VHS recorders did. This will potentially leave countries with massive fleets of unwanted cars as the populace move to EVs. How will the car manufacturers manage the transition?

I have an old turntable in the loft. Occasionally I drag it out, plug it in and listen to some vinyl LPs. Is this what’s going to happen to the car in its current form? Will some of us have their current (or next) car stashed in their garage, and bring it out for the odd drive, revelling in the past and the memories that go with it? If so, I’ll be swapping the Insignia for a nice V6 Capri. And maybe a classic V8 Range Rover. Best chat to MrsG-T about building that triple garage I guess.

Which car would you choose to keep?

From Blog


This year I set myself the task of taking more photographs, but trying to improve my technique and composition. I’ve had some great constructive advice and I think I’m beginning to see improvements. I’m quite proud of this shot, taken in the less-than exotic location of a Lidl car-park (we don’t shop there – I just liked the lights!)

This is brilliant! The guy in the video was getting all sorts of stick for buying an automatic Ferrari (actually an F1 paddle shift) and so he made the video you can see below to prove that it was actually better than the manual version. Enjoy!


If you’ve been reading this blog for any time at all, or you know me outside of the blogging world, you’ll know that I am a petrol-head. Cars are, and have been for as long as I can remember, my passion. I know stupid facts about ordinary cars and I still devour a range of car magazines when I can.

However, in recent years print magazines have become comparatively expensive (I bought three novels in Asda for 75% of the price of one car magazine) and so my reading has been reluctantly reduced.

Now, some of the guys behind Evo have launched a car website – Drivers-Republic – which is an online magazine about cars. And it’s really good! The photographs are of high quality, they’ve integrated video and there are plenty of forums and information about cars.

I can only assume that it’s funded by the ads as it’s still free to read. If you love cars, get over there, click on the ads and buy some stuff, and enjoy the read.

I don’t think this is quite the subheading that was supposed to appear…