• đź‘‹ Welcome! If you were registered on Cybertruckownersclub.com as of October 1, 2024 or earlier, you can simply login here with the same username and password as on Cybertruckownersclub.

    If you wish, you can remove your account here.

Mary Barra Living in Cloud Cuckoo Land

Status
Not open for further replies.

CyberGus

Well-known member
First Name
Gus
Joined
May 22, 2021
Threads
58
Messages
4,495
Reaction score
1,764
Location
Austin, TX
Website
www.timeanddate.com
Vehicles
1981 DeLorean, 2024 Cybertruck
Occupation
IT Specialist
Country flag
I think Biden is closing the barn door thinking the cows are still inside to be honest.

I’d love to find out otherwise, but I’m a cynical SOB.
No matter how cynical I get, I can’t keep up
 

MEDICALJMP

Well-known member
First Name
Jeff
Joined
Apr 28, 2020
Threads
164
Messages
851
Reaction score
412
Location
Omaha, NE
Vehicles
Toyota Avalon, Rav4, Tri-motor Cybertruck
Occupation
Nurse
Country flag
We could just leave out the EV subsidies entirely as far as I’m concerned. I can think of a lot of better ways to spend the money.

But I wasn’t trying to poke at Biden at all. I was just referring to the fact that the foot dragging and executional incompetence from US auto makers has put them in a position where recovery is going to be exceptionally difficult. Subsidies won’t make people buy a car that these guys can’t produce.
Agreed. Corporate welfare is not needed in general, but we are already at the tipping point of EV adoption without it. People are buying EVs at higher and higher prices. I suspect that part of the increases in Tesla’s recently is because of the expected tax breaks. Charging more with the customer getting a break sounds win-win, but the consumer still loses out.
 
OP
OP
Ogre

Ogre

Well-known member
First Name
Dennis
Joined
Jul 3, 2021
Threads
135
Messages
7,953
Reaction score
3,498
Location
Ogregon
Vehicles
Model Y
Country flag
I just don’t see these subsidies doing much.

We’ve had subsidies for 10 years already and Tesla is the only company who has really leveraged them to build out their EV infrastructure and production.

Ford has barely tapped them and GM squandered the money. The only reason car companies are going to transition is because of competition and that is here already.

At this point, it’s essentially corporate welfare to help out the incompetent and lazy builders who are likely to fail or need another government bailout in less than 10 years even with the subsidies.

We pretend to be a free market country, but the only way the free market actually works is if you let companies fail. That’s part of the cycle. Letting companies get increasingly bloated and inefficient decade after decade and bailing them out every time they screw up results in increasingly fragile companies.
 
OP
OP
Ogre

Ogre

Well-known member
First Name
Dennis
Joined
Jul 3, 2021
Threads
135
Messages
7,953
Reaction score
3,498
Location
Ogregon
Vehicles
Model Y
Country flag
Agreed. Corporate welfare is not needed in general, but we are already at the tipping point of EV adoption without it. People are buying EVs at higher and higher prices. I suspect that part of the increases in Tesla’s recently is because of the expected tax breaks. Charging more with the customer getting a break sounds win-win, but the consumer still loses out.
Tesla is charging more to slow down demand. Now we get subsidies and demand increases so Tesla is likely to charge even more.

Same story with the Mustang and any other good EV. This is a fantastic hand-out for shareholders, does little to nothing for consumers.
 

HaulingAss

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2020
Threads
10
Messages
3,455
Reaction score
668
Location
Washington State
Vehicles
2010 F-150, 2018 Model 3 P, FS DM Cybertruck
Country flag
EVs are only 2% of the market right now.

So how can we be past it?

Every dollar spent on the EV tax credit is at least a dollar saved in medical expenses from air pollution.

-Crissa
That would be true if EV subsidies would increase battery supply more quickly but it's not clear that it would. There are numerous new battery production facilities being built right now with more added all the time and EV production is still going to be constrained by batteries (as it is now). EV tax credits, even if they were limited to BEVs and not PHEVs would not cause more EVs to be built because they would still be constrained by batteries.

You could argue EV tax credits would cause more battery factories to be built but I don't really see that happening and, even if it did, the new batteries would come on line for 4 years. But I think planned battery capacity will grow as quickly as battery manufacturers can ramp production anyway so I don't see EV tax credits as helpful for much of anything but lining pockets of auto buyers with tax money.
 

Crissa

Well-known member
First Name
Crissa
Joined
Jul 8, 2020
Threads
82
Messages
11,771
Reaction score
3,850
Location
Santa Cruz
Vehicles
2014 Zero S, 2013 Mazda 3
Country flag
EV subsidies are essential to displace the ICE market. Yes, every BEV is being sold, but this is about migrating every car to BEV... And if prices aren't stable, then you're rewarding the companies that didn't invest.

And we need room to ramp up the Apteras and Rivians and others who need this headroom.

200,000 was never enough, not in a market that sells 17 million a year.

-Crissa

The people who are buying next year are those who couldn't jump and buy electric cars when they were expensive.
 
OP
OP
Ogre

Ogre

Well-known member
First Name
Dennis
Joined
Jul 3, 2021
Threads
135
Messages
7,953
Reaction score
3,498
Location
Ogregon
Vehicles
Model Y
Country flag
The Rivians and Apteras have 200,000 credits under existing legislation.

Not passing new legislation largely impacts existing makers like GM and Tesla who have already either benefitted greatly or squandered the money.

Perhaps I’d be a lot less cynical about this if it weren’t an all you can eat type benefit. A reset increasing the benefits to half a million units per company would be more palatable because then they could make reasonable estimates of the cost of this measure. Another thought. Cap it at 5 million EVs sold. Then we at least have a hard upper limit on the amount.
 

Dids

Well-known member
First Name
Les
Joined
Dec 21, 2019
Threads
7
Messages
1,347
Reaction score
401
Location
Massachusetts
Vehicles
04 Tacoma, 23 Cybertruck
Occupation
Self
Country flag
Agreed. Corporate welfare is not needed in general, but we are already at the tipping point of EV adoption without it. People are buying EVs at higher and higher prices. I suspect that part of the increases in Tesla’s recently is because of the expected tax breaks. Charging more with the customer getting a break sounds win-win, but the consumer still loses out.
Yes I also have qualms about subsidies. But climate action is imperative according to climate scientists. What action do you propose? BEV is low hanging fruit at this point. No need to invent anything and can make significant dent in emmisions.... Your proposed action has to be politically possible, technologically possible and ideally more efficient replacement of a carbon emitting process all inside the governments tax and spend mechanisms.
 

A.W.Jelfs

Member
First Name
Asa
Joined
Oct 8, 2021
Threads
1
Messages
18
Reaction score
19
Location
Adelaide Australia
Vehicles
HQ gts 350 monaro Ht gts 307 monaro
Occupation
retired investor
Country flag
Hi all i think subsidies should be handed out to all American EV makers if the car is being built in America, union and non union. The reason is to speed up the process of converting the cars being used in America to EV's.
This will save the environment and save money which will be used in mitigating the damage to infrastructure and environment.
The spend on mitigating damage will be in the trillions.
Have a nice day all.
 

TruckElectric

Well-known member
First Name
Bryan
Joined
Jun 16, 2020
Threads
609
Messages
2,004
Reaction score
1,493
Location
Texas
Vehicles
Dodge Ram diesel
Occupation
Retired
Country flag
Mary Barra, claiming GM is the “US Leader in EVs” immediately after the interviewer pointed out Tesla had much greater market share.

Musk’s reply here is A+. Genuinely laughed out loud.


Can you imagine if Herbert Diess said this(what Mary Barra said, not Elon)? He's be gone faster than he could change his lederhosen!
 

GnarlyDudeLive

Well-known member
First Name
Darin
Joined
Aug 26, 2020
Threads
15
Messages
358
Reaction score
113
Location
Chicago
Vehicles
2004 F350 Dually (Tri-CT reservation)
Occupation
Database Administrator
Country flag
Yes I also have qualms about subsidies. But climate action is imperative according to climate scientists. What action do you propose? BEV is low hanging fruit at this point. No need to invent anything and can make significant dent in emmisions.... Your proposed action has to be politically possible, technologically possible and ideally more efficient replacement of a carbon emitting process all inside the governments tax and spend mechanisms.
How about better/more solar installation credits, something that benefits for a longer duration and is not tied to a depreciating asset? EV's are being gobbled up as fast as they are produced without incentives *regardless* of EV's upfront higher costs. Tesla's pricing alone is a great example of why EV credits are moot at this point. The demand is so high that they have raised prices to lower demand thus effectively canceling out the potential credits value *AND* this is the largest and most capable of the EV manufacturers. The world is already transitioning at a rate as fast as production allows. While EV's may appear to be a low hanging fruit for reducing carbon missions I just don't see it at this time as being THE solution. There has to be a better solution or different road to take to reach the same goal of lowering carbon footprint using the same tax dollars. Examples (not vetted): Carbon capture, more efficient rails to reduce OTR hauling, investments in cleaner mining that could open up more localized mining, etc. Short deeper dive: Banning mining in the US because it is dirty solves ZERO solutions to the global issue as its simply going to be done somewhere else with less restrictive regulations and then creates a secondary dependency as well as additional transit carbon costs making it even worse.

While I am at it, lol, I might as well mention that I think the specific provision of spending countless billions of dollars to expand broadband in the infrastructure bill is also late to the game. Elon already is spending billions of dollars to provide the same via the StarLink product unless the Gov plans to just subsidize the product which I am not a fan of but would be far more $ efficient than politicians devising technology. :oops:. I even find it a bit of an insult to Elon that after he invested billions to provide the same expansion of broadband to rural area's in need that the gov wants to come in and neuter his efforts and investments.....
 
Last edited:

Dids

Well-known member
First Name
Les
Joined
Dec 21, 2019
Threads
7
Messages
1,347
Reaction score
401
Location
Massachusetts
Vehicles
04 Tacoma, 23 Cybertruck
Occupation
Self
Country flag
Can you imagine if Herbert Diess said this(what Mary Barra said, not Elon)? He's be gone faster than he could change his lederhosen!
To be fair GM has produced tons of EVs and has been doing it for a long time. Many of them are partnership EV in the China market. TESLA is definitely outselling them now but that is different thing than being out in front during the early years of 2010s. Everyone can agree that Tesla made the first Lithium ion car but the Roadster was hardly a huge impact outside of proving that it can be done.
The Nissan leaf was the global best selling plug in until 2019.
 
Last edited:

Dids

Well-known member
First Name
Les
Joined
Dec 21, 2019
Threads
7
Messages
1,347
Reaction score
401
Location
Massachusetts
Vehicles
04 Tacoma, 23 Cybertruck
Occupation
Self
Country flag
How about better/more solar installation credits, something that benefits for a longer duration and is not tied to a depreciating asset? EV's are being gobbled up as fast as they are produced without incentives *regardless* of EV's upfront higher costs. Tesla's pricing alone is a great example of why EV credits are moot at this point. The demand is so high that they have raised prices to lower demand thus effectively canceling out the potential credits value *AND* this is the largest and most capable of the EV manufacturers. The world is already transitioning at a rate as fast as production allows. While EV's may appear to be a low hanging fruit for reducing carbon missions I just don't see it at this time as being THE solution. There has to be a better solution or different road to take to reach the same goal of lowering carbon footprint using the same tax dollars. Examples (not vetted): Carbon capture, more efficient rails to reduce OTR hauling, investments in cleaner mining that could open up more localized mining, etc. Short deeper dive: Banning mining in the US because it is dirty solves ZERO solutions to the global issue as its simply going to be done somewhere else with less restrictive regulations and then creates a secondary dependency as well as additional transit carbon costs making it even worse.

While I am at it, lol, I might as well mention that I think the specific provision of spending countless billions of dollars to expand broadband in the infrastructure bill is also late to the game. Elon already is spending billions of dollars to provide the same via the StarLink product unless the Gov plans to just subsidize the product which I am not a fan of but would be far more $ efficient than politicians devising technology. :oops:. I even find it a bit of an insult to Elon that after he invested billions to provide the same expansion of broadband to rural area's in need that the gov wants to come in and neuter his efforts and investments.....
Aren't most solar panels produced in China? Hmm I don't think you can sell that politically...
"EV's are being gobbled up as fast as they are produced" "the subsidies just go to the manufacturer" etc etc... wouldn't subsidies if they only go to the manufacturer who produces evs as fast as they can be the goal to speed rapid change over? Isn't the argument that OEM aren't transitioning fast enough?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
 
Top