In 2022 the European Union, Canada, the U.K. and the U.S. state of California approved regulations banning the sale of new gasoline-powered cars and trucks by 2035. Plug-in hybrids, full electrics and hydrogen cell vehicles would all count toward the zero-emission targets, though auto makers will only be able to use plug-in hybrids to meet 20% of the overall requirement. The regulation will impact only new-vehicle sales and affects only manufacturers, not dealerships. Traditional internal-combustion vehicles will still be legal to own and drive after 2035, and new models can still be sold until 2035. Volkswagen and Toyota have said they aim to sell only zero-emission cars in Europe by that time.
Yes, but should be focusing more on improving public transportation
@99RBH7S2yrs2Y
isn't really that big of a deal right now as the number od e-vehicles is insanely low for the government to engage in making e-pumps everywhere...until we have a certain % of e-vehicles running around the customers should be responsible for their own charging
Not until there are enough lithium ion battery recycling plants and enough green energy generation.
@99CC9XN2yrs2Y
Invest more in Public Transit instead.
@99BZHJFIndependent2yrs2Y
Yes, but the ownership of these stations should be sold, to protect them from vandalism.
@9987HWC2yrs2Y
Yes, through a public-private partnership
@997LKGR2yrs2Y
No, the government must first focus on improving local public transport to reduce the need to own individual vehicals
@997C3GTIndependent2yrs2Y
I do not have an education in the subject matter.
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