Ford is working on a $25,000 compact EV

Small EVs are a big market abroad—a stark contrast to the gigantic offerings like the Ford F-150 Lightning and the plethora of electric SUVs that are prevalent in the U.S. But the small EV market here is growing, and Ford is getting in on the action. The automaker is pivoting to smaller—and cheaper—electric vehicles....

https://www.fastcompany.com/91064581/ford-is-working-on-a-25000-compact-ev

Ford is working on a $25,000 compact EV

The small EV market is growing, and U.S. automakers need to compete with their Chinese counterparts on cheaper options.

Fast Company
i Need a base range of 240 miles. Less then that and no can.
Is this for road trip purposes, or do you actually drive 200+ miles any given day? If it’s the latter, that would easily be 50k+ miles per year.
Not at all for road trip purposes. That’s just for commuting and basic use. I know what I need after driving an EV for a couple years.
I’m not doubting at all. My car only has about 130 miles of range in good weather, but I typically drive less than 20 miles in a day. I thought the range was going to be an issue when I got the car, but it hasn’t been at all. My partner drives way more than I do, though, so she still has an ICE car.

I think that’s the key. I think EVs work great for a large swath of the densely populated East Coast and some fairly urban places in the rest of the country. But all of the midsize towns and small cities in the South, Midwest, and West are going to be very tough to manage in an EV.

Would it cover your needs 80% of the time? Absolutely. But in reality you need a second vehicle that burns fuel to cover that 20%. The places where this is most true are also the poorest places in the county. The places where buying one vehicle that can do everything is critical. They also have the harshest weather and are much closer to situations where survival is vehicle dependent. The vehicles have to be so inexpensive you almost can’t afford to not have one or they have to do everything better than their ICE counterparts for similar money to get widespread adoption.

I’ve been saying for a while now that HOAs need to have a small pool of pickups to time share. People need pickups occasionally, but definitely not daily for the vast majority. Their fuel consumption, emissions, road wear and safety make a huge impact. Needlessly, most of the time. A small HOA fleet would allow for people in suburbs to focus on people transporters for their daily drivers.

Uhaul and Home Depot (among others) rent trucks. When I moved, I had no furniture and no car. I biked past a yard sale with a bunch of things I wanted, told them what I wanted, rode to Uhaul, rented a truck, and brought a couch, a desk, a table, and 4 chairs home with me, for a rental fee of $30 as I recall, and not much more to buy all that furniture.