The only reason Electric cars are even being considered is because of Government regulations forcing manufacturers to make engines using alternative fuels. If those regulations did not exist not many automotive manufacturers would be making electric cars. Electricity will cost more than gas once more than 50% of the vehicles on the road are electric.
If regulations did not exist, we'd all be living in ramshackle houses, with faulty electricity and bad plumbing set upon poor foundations. Our national infrastructure would not have lasted nearly a hundred years. Some regulations are good, it's a matter of perspective or world view.
I see you are from Gardena, California? Why bring politics into this? Maybe you are not old enough to remember the constant brown smog that blanketed the southland and nearly every major city in the US, back in the 60s, 70s and early 80s? I lived in the LA basin for 10 years. I was brought up on a farm nearly 35 miles from the rubber mills of Akron to the west and 30 miles to the steel mills of Youngstown to the east. I can remember as a little boy my eyes watering and the stench, because of Akron's rubber mills. I remember seeing the Cuyahoga on fire. An oil slick on Berlin Lake where we fished swam and skinny dipped. I personally do not want to go back to that. I enjoy the lack of pollutants in my streams and rivers, the lack of acid rain destroying the great north woods, and the amount of smog in the air I breath. I enjoy seeing hawks and Bald Eagles on a regular basis, clean back country air, good fresh drinking water, and yes, what we all on these forums have in common, a general love for nature and the great outdoors, otherwise we wouldn't be on these forums. I understand the flaws and pitfalls of EVs. Fully, but I also know it is a major stepping stone to get us away from the socio/economic influence of the giant oil companies, let alone, the further destruction of what, ( I'll say once again ) we all, as overlanders claim to enjoy and dare I say, love.
I have stated here and on other forums that EVs and PPVs and more than likely a third that we do not even know exists, will compete with one another, thereby keeping the cost of gasoline and diesel competitive with EV or whatever other alternative power lies in the future. So perhaps one day, EVs will be more expensive to operate than PPVs.