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Where are the electric cars for the masses?

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    Ive just been searching there how much a Zoe costs without grant - and can only find the grant for the UK ones at £3,500 .. anyone know what the grant is for the Irish ones?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,031 ✭✭✭✭Del2005


    Costs involved in tech, design, construction, infrastructure, batteries and their components and materials needed which themselves are very hard to mine and costly too.

    The same costs are involved in the design and construction of ICE cars yet they are cheaper even though they are more complex to design and manufacture. The car companies, bar 1, are not building infrastructure.

    Batteries are an issue but that's not the reason why the cars are so expensive.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,788 ✭✭✭✭JPA


    New technology requires massive R and D expenditure. The initial releases will try to recoup that money, then when the money is recouped the profit starts rolling in.
    Everything a company does is for profit.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,645 ✭✭✭krissovo


    ICE cars have had 100 years to optimize the supply chain, EV’s while the technology is arguably older than Diesel engine cars the optimization of that supply chain has not evolved until just recently.

    Tesla have started and the gigafactories should drive down cost. VW look to be the first mainstream manufacturer to optimize with the MEB platform and in a few years costs should drop.

    Grants are not helping either!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,129 ✭✭✭✭Danzy


    BENDYBINN wrote: »
    The ev companies have copped on that governments are going to give big grants for buying their cars............so they have upped their prices to collect their share of this. Happens everywhere there is grants involved.

    The auto industry have also copped on that Electricity is going to replace the Internal Combustion engine, same as that engine replaced the horse.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,958 ✭✭✭✭Shefwedfan


    1. supply and demand
    2. Most manufacturers are only making small amount of don’t drive manufacture cost down
    3. Government grants
    4. Lack of action by government against combustion engine
    5. Fear factor in customer base


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,515 ✭✭✭✭whisky_galore


    Markcheese wrote: »
    Well, electric cars are new technology

    Electric vehicles have been around longer than the internal combustion engined car.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,129 ✭✭✭✭Danzy


    Electric vehicles have been around longer than the internal combustion engined car.

    Sideline for bout 90 years though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 51,289 ✭✭✭✭bazz26


    Shefwedfan wrote: »
    1. supply and demand
    2. Most manufacturers are only making small amount of don’t drive manufacture cost down
    3. Government grants
    4. Lack of action by government against combustion engine
    5. Fear factor in customer base

    How does 3. make EVs expensive? The manufacturer is still getting the same money for the vehicle except some of it is coming from the government rather than the consumer. Or is there gouging going on by manufacturers to make as much money as possible while they are still a niche product?

    As for 4. If you have punish people to force them to buy something then there is something wrong with the product. If it's as affordable and does exactly what a combustion engine did then there should be no reason for the predictable and thoughtless tax your way

    Also how does 5. work. If anything has taught us people generally vote with their wallets first and their moral conscience is further down the list.


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  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Music Moderators, Politics Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 22,360 CMod ✭✭✭✭Dravokivich


    Electric vehicles have been around longer than the internal combustion engined car.

    After the 191x's they've been pretty much produced for proof of concept as opposed to mass market. Mainly due to understandable issues with range.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,256 ✭✭✭Ubbquittious


    a battery pack isn't cheap. try to source a lithium ion battery pack with 10s of KWh it's not going to be cheap anywhere.

    Also they market these EV yokes at technophiles who want all the latest tech sh1tes on their vehicle 'as standard' and this pushes up the price more than if they would just plonk an electric motor and a battery pack into a dacia dustbin.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 472 ✭✭Turbohymac


    I think Andy from sligo wants a free electric car..


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    Turbohymac wrote: »
    I think Andy from sligo wants a free electric car..

    oh , I wouldnt say no - are you offering? :)

    No, being honest though - i am still a bit miffed way there is a difference of thousands between a new Clio and a electric Zoe.

    Ya, i take into account batteries for EV's are expensive ... but so are petrol engines


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,487 ✭✭✭Seweryn


    Danzy wrote: »
    The auto industry have also copped on that Electricity is going to replace the Internal Combustion engine, same as that engine replaced the horse.
    No, the combustion engine replaced the electric motor over 100 years ago. Now the old technology is coming back.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    Electric vehicles have been around longer than the internal combustion engined car.

    I know, even my earliest memories was being 7 years old in the 70's and hearing the electric milk float on my estate at 4am :D


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,645 ✭✭✭krissovo


    bazz26 wrote: »
    How does 3. make EVs expensive? The manufacturer is still getting the same money for the vehicle except some of it is coming from the government rather than the consumer. Or is there gouging going on by manufacturers to make as much money as possible while they are still a niche product?

    The easiest way to explain is using the home charger grant as an example:

    SEAI offer €600 to install a charger at home, people are like whey hey free money so book a install from one of the many suppliers that costs about €1100. Customer pays €1100 and claims €600 back so the customer pay’s €500 and they think they got a good deal.

    Break the numbers down and you soon see that the suppliers are doing well from the install:

    Charger (Hardware) costs ~€550 using a standard wallbox/Tesla home charger as an example
    Additional cabling ~€100
    Electrician Labor 1 > 2hrs @ ~€80 per hour direct labour or €20 per hour salary

    It is possible to install a home charger for €600 so in some cases suppliers are making 80%+ margin per home install and the customer is happy as they get €600 from the government.

    So grants fill the consumer with a false confidence that they can spend as they are getting a deal and suppliers can and do increase their margin as there is no pressure to reduce margin.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,256 ✭✭✭Ubbquittious


    krissovo wrote: »
    The easiest way to explain is using the home charger grant as an example:

    SEAI offer €600 to install a charger at home, people are like whey hey free money so book a install from one of the many suppliers that costs about €1100. Customer pays €1100 and claims €600 back so the customer pay’s €500 and they think they got a good deal.

    Break the numbers down and you soon see that the suppliers are doing well from the install:

    Charger (Hardware) costs ~€550 using a standard wallbox/Tesla home charger as an example
    Additional cabling ~€100
    Electrician Labor 1 > 2hrs @ ~€80 per hour direct labour or €20 per hour salary

    It is possible to install a home charger for €600 so in some cases suppliers are making 80%+ margin per home install and the customer is happy as they get €600 from the government.

    So grants fill the consumer with a false confidence that they can spend as they are getting a deal and suppliers can and do increase their margin as there is no pressure to reduce margin.

    The prices really head for the moon as soon as grants are mentioned. A farmer told me not so long ago he got some automatic cow feeding equipment for the low low price of 14k. These were 7k one time before grants were introduced and now the manufacturer are pocketing the extra 7k.

    I don't know one case where the end user is the person benefitting the most from the grant


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 25,167 Mod ✭✭✭✭CramCycle


    thats what I got to thinking and then I am like , hold on this shouldnt be about that. You have people being told to consider buy electric vehicle because they are better for the the environment - so why if anyone, are people / manufacturers profiteering out of this?

    also , with the iPhone are you not normally paying over the odds because of the name your paying for. I cant see that you would be paying over the odds because of the name of renault say .. not even Hyundai .. maybe a BMW electric or Audi maybe .. but Renault???

    Is this a serious question, are you actually asking why a company wants to make money?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,552 ✭✭✭✭El_Duderino 09


    thats what I got to thinking and then I am like , hold on this shouldnt be about that. You have people being told to consider buy electric vehicle because they are better for the the environment - so why if anyone, are people / manufacturers profiteering out of this?


    Ah here. It's capitalism doing its thing. Capitalism doesn't care about the environment, that isn't its job. It's job it to make money and the pressure to buy electric acts to increase demand and capitalism dictates that demand is met with price increase.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    CramCycle wrote: »
    Is this a serious question, are you actually asking why a company wants to make money?

    well i suppose if the difference between a new Clio petrol and an electric Zoe is €10 grand (and thats apart from what they get in grant money) - thats a big gap. And I think the Zoe if i am not wrong is the cheapest BEV you can buy at the moment (we wont talk Twizzy in this instance)

    um, then yeah.

    course a business has to make money, but then there is making profit and then sort of like ripping people off .. the same people who are urged to start thinking about making their next car purchase a BEV


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    I suppose if people stopped paying 26 grand for the zoe tomorrow and voted with their feet then renault would have no option to considerably lower their price to sell them?

    But whilst the 'I have got to have new technology, but I dont really give a toss about the environment as such but I have over 26grand burning a hole in my pocket so I can afford it' and the Zoe's are selling for that price I can see why renault dont make them available cheaper for Joe public who only has 15/16 grand to spend on a car

    that would be a great experiment - have 2 car's in the Renault Showroom. One the New ICE Clio at 16grand and a Renault BEV Zoe at 16Grand or near as dammit and then just see which one the public would buy -


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 555 ✭✭✭Philb76


    JPA wrote: »
    New technology requires massive R and D expenditure. The initial releases will try to recoup that money, then when the money is recouped the profit starts rolling in.
    Everything a company does is for profit.

    Even to develop a newer petrol or diesel engine takes years and millions so that makers sense as they are nearly all starting from scratch


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,645 ✭✭✭krissovo


    There is no doubt EV’s today are more expensive but the big picture is certainly they will / should be cheaper than ICE cars. There is less moving parts so less manufacturing..... you get the picture. We are still in the early adopter phase so take any product that launches, 4K TV for example the early adopters pay a premium.

    Also in certain scenarios EV’s are currently cheaper.

    If you look from a top down perspective of the market EV’s can be massively cheaper to own than ICE cars. My household owned 2 premium cars 6 months ago, a high end Mercedes and Volvo SUV. These have been replaced with relatively cheaper EV’s a Leaf 40 and BMW I3, both are still expensive cars but we have been bit by the moral bug and do value the environment and also now benefit from cheap fuel and tax. We are saving on the initial purchasing cost of the cars (from our usual) plus saving €10k per year on tax & fuel savings.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    so you dont reckon the manufacturers will carry on for too long doing such a big difference between the price of a BEV and ICE car soon then and should level off as more people buy them? - what timeframe roughly are we talking to lower down to a price the masses can afford? - 5 years? 10 years?

    I thought there was a very marked increase of people buying BEV's in 2019 yet the prices havent really budged .. all thats come on line is the dearer Kona and the newer leaf and all cars with a higher range per full charge.

    Is it likely the range will level off at around 400km on one charge and then the cost of EV's coming down in price , or will the range go up even further leading to the cost of a EV staying the same price to buy or even go higher in purchase price?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 555 ✭✭✭Philb76


    Like current ice cars wot engine it has will obviously reflect the price and assume it will be the same with evs longer range and more power will be more expensive the current leaf took a massive price hike and I know this cos a friend bought the very last of the old model in 2018 and said he couldn't afford the new model


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 555 ✭✭✭Philb76


    I suppose with evs is how low can you genuinely go a 1litre car will go as far as a Bentley


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,645 ✭✭✭krissovo


    What’s happened is that the demand for EV’s has increased and the supply is low which equals high price.

    The Leaf 40 example above is a good one, in early 2019 you could buy a SVE leaf for ~€30k (list price) after grants. Once the stock of Kona’s, E-Niro’s & Ioniq’s dried up nissan raised the price by €1500.

    Even The 2nd hand market has gone crazy with old leaf’s appreciating in value.

    I paid for my Leaf in June that cost just over €28k for a SVE, took delivery for 192 and my car actually appreciated when I drove off the forecourt.

    Next year is a different story, Tesla Model 3’s are available, apparently plenty of Kona’s, e-Niro’s, Ioniq’s and ID3 will start shipping. Give it 3 years and the prices will normalise.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    Philb76 wrote: »
    Like current ice cars wot engine it has will obviously reflect the price and assume it will be the same with evs longer range and more power will be more expensive the current leaf took a massive price hike and I know this cos a friend bought the very last of the old model in 2018 and said he couldn't afford the new model

    They wont be going the same way with BEV's though.

    They wont have in the new line up of BEV

    the car dealer is not going to say "Hello sir this entry level EV has a range of 350km .... but let me show you the next model up in our showroom with the higher range of 450km , its more expensive but its worth it" - I cannot ever see that happening , becuase the manufacturers know that people who are buying a new EV wants one that will go the longest/furthest on one charge.

    Only way I can see if they did want to have staged prices on EV's is to cut down on the trim inside and out. - maybe not everyone who wants to buy an electric car wants all the bells and whistles.

    "Hello sir this is our entry level Zoe , it doesnt have heated seats or air conditioning or sat nav built in just a bog standard radio head unit with a line in and usb socket, and steel wheels instead of alloy wheels and plain white in colour and bog standard upholstery and only electric windows on the drivers and passenger doors... but over here if you follow me we have the dearer Zoe with heated seat, sat nav, air conditioning , alloy wheels , all electric windows an colours and better seats and upholstery .."

    I have seen that on ICE cars and diesels where they have different levels of specs and prices to match but i am not seeing that on EV's , well not at the moment.

    Unless maybe the likes of Dacia (who are part owned by renault arent they) come along one day and do to the EV market what they done with the ICE sandero's and the like.

    If the price was right (say if it matched the price of the clio at 16 grand) but the Zoe for that price didnt come with air conditioning, no heated seats, bog standard radio and no sat nav and basic upholstery and no automatic headlights or rain sensors, no parking sensors no other bells and whistles just a plain car but a plain Electric vehicle would I be interested? - hell yeah I reckon . - but would others thats the thing.

    I'm almost wondering that when a dealer tries to sell an electric car if they make more of what you are doing to help the environment, and the cheaper tax and the aspect of never having to buy petrol ever again and the savings that can be gained as opposed to ICE .... or do they sell it saying "look what you are getting for the money here - look it has heated seats, alloy wheels, sat nav with multimedia , automatic this and that, all bells and whistles and gadgets etc etc.." ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 555 ✭✭✭Philb76


    They wont be going the same way with BEV's though.

    They wont have in the new line up of BEV

    the car dealer is not going to say "Hello sir this entry level EV has a range of 350km .... but let me show you the next model up in our showroom with the higher range of 450km , its more expensive but its worth it" - I cannot ever see that happening , becuase the manufacturers know that people who are buying a new EV wants one that will go the longest/furthest on one charge.

    Only way I can see if they did want to have staged prices on EV's is to cut down on the trim inside and out. - maybe not everyone who wants to buy an electric car wants all the bells and whistles.

    "Hello sir this is our entry level Zoe , it doesnt have heated seats or air conditioning or sat nav built in just a bog standard radio head unit with a line in and usb socket, and steel wheels instead of alloy wheels and plain white in colour and bog standard upholstery and only electric windows on the drivers and passenger doors... but over here if you follow me we have the dearer Zoe with heated seat, sat nav, air conditioning , alloy wheels , all electric windows an colours and better seats and upholstery .."

    I have seen that on ICE cars and diesels where they have different levels of specs and prices to match but i am not seeing that on EV's , well not at the moment.

    Unless maybe the likes of Dacia (who are part owned by renault arent they) come along one day and do to the EV market what they done with the ICE sandero's and the like.

    If the price was right (say if it matched the price of the clio at 16 grand) but the Zoe for that price didnt come with air conditioning, no heated seats, bog standard radio and no sat nav and basic upholstery and no automatic headlights or rain sensors, no parking sensors no other bells and whistles just a plain car but a plain Electric vehicle would I be interested? - hell yeah I reckon . - but would others thats the thing.

    I'm almost wondering that when a dealer tries to sell an electric car if they make more of what you are doing to help the environment, and the cheaper tax and the aspect of never having to buy petrol ever again and the savings that can be gained as opposed to ICE .... or do they sell it saying "look what you are getting for the money here - look it has heated seats, alloy wheels, sat nav with multimedia , automatic this and that, all bells and whistles and gadgets etc etc.." ?

    They did do that with the big diesel sell to people who didn't need them dealers couldn't give a feck about the environment they need to sell cars


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,958 ✭✭✭✭Shefwedfan


    krissovo wrote: »
    What’s happened is that the demand for EV’s has increased and the supply is low which equals high price.

    The Leaf 40 example above is a good one, in early 2019 you could buy a SVE leaf for ~€30k (list price) after grants. Once the stock of Kona’s, E-Niro’s & Ioniq’s dried up nissan raised the price by €1500.

    Even The 2nd hand market has gone crazy with old leaf’s appreciating in value.

    I paid for my Leaf in June that cost just over €28k for a SVE, took delivery for 192 and my car actually appreciated when I drove off the forecourt.

    Next year is a different story, Tesla Model 3’s are available, apparently plenty of Kona’s, e-Niro’s, Ioniq’s and ID3 will start shipping. Give it 3 years and the prices will normalise.

    They changed the spec on the Leaf and that was the difference in price....7-8” screen etc


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,638 ✭✭✭zilog_jones


    the car dealer is not going to say "Hello sir this entry level EV has a range of 350km .... but let me show you the next model up in our showroom with the higher range of 450km , its more expensive but its worth it" - I cannot ever see that happening , becuase the manufacturers know that people who are buying a new EV wants one that will go the longest/furthest on one charge.

    Only way I can see if they did want to have staged prices on EV's is to cut down on the trim inside and out. - maybe not everyone who wants to buy an electric car wants all the bells and whistles.

    "Hello sir this is our entry level Zoe , it doesnt have heated seats or air conditioning or sat nav built in just a bog standard radio head unit with a line in and usb socket, and steel wheels instead of alloy wheels and plain white in colour and bog standard upholstery and only electric windows on the drivers and passenger doors... but over here if you follow me we have the dearer Zoe with heated seat, sat nav, air conditioning , alloy wheels , all electric windows an colours and better seats and upholstery .."

    I have seen that on ICE cars and diesels where they have different levels of specs and prices to match but i am not seeing that on EV's , well not at the moment.

    Unless maybe the likes of Dacia (who are part owned by renault arent they) come along one day and do to the EV market what they done with the ICE sandero's and the like.

    If the price was right (say if it matched the price of the clio at 16 grand) but the Zoe for that price didnt come with air conditioning, no heated seats, bog standard radio and no sat nav and basic upholstery and no automatic headlights or rain sensors, no parking sensors no other bells and whistles just a plain car but a plain Electric vehicle would I be interested? - hell yeah I reckon . - but would others thats the thing.

    The biggest cost with increased range is the batteries, and cutting down on accessories and equipment is not going to make up for the thousands more that extra 10-20 kWh or so will cost. Also, things like steel wheels will reduce efficiency, which will have a notable impact on range.

    Not everyone needs massive range either. Especially when considering an EV as a second car, something with 100-150 km range can be sufficient and would cost drastically less than a car with >400 km range.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,059 ✭✭✭kirving


    Philb76 wrote: »
    Even to develop a newer petrol or diesel engine takes years and millions so that makers sense as they are nearly all starting from scratch

    Try again, hundreds of millions to billions!

    Some of the problem is that EV tech is moving so fast that manufacturers can't amortise the initial investment over say 15+ years as they can with a standard engine design. Sure there are incremental upgrades, but most engine blocks are nigh on identical for even longer than that.

    With EV's, today's tech can and will be out of day in months/years, not decades, so that investment must be recouped sooner rather than later.

    Grants certainly influence price. Just look what Bike to Work schemes did to the cost of otherwise standard commuter bikes. I has a number of identical Trek bikes in my teens, as did my brother afterward. A model which was €400 then, rose to the guts of €700 within a couple of years, with little to no better specs.


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Clio is cheap because Renault has lots of competion and they have to build as many as they can sell to stay in races.

    Nissan uses the same electric motor in cars between 110 and 215 BHP and I suspect the motor could handle even more power so the cost of designing these will be really cheap once the volume picks up. For consumers to get a good deal the maker has to have a good battery deal in place and viable competion in the market place to force the average price of cars down due to competition.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    I shouldnt think we will get to this stage but in showrooms they could say something like

    " here is our entry level Zoe with a 66kw motor and 22kwh battery , its our cheapest model and its ideal for town driving and short trips.. but if you just follow me here is our Zoe 80kw motor model with 41kw-h battery it is more expensive but it does come with a range up to 400km on one charge"

    but they wont do that , they will not have the choice for the customer they will just have the 80kw motor 41kwh one brand new and if you want to go for the other one you wil have to buy t on the used car market.

    at least with ICE cars you have more of a choice in a car howroom - you pick your car you like and if you want one with a higher capacity petrol engine say, you can, but you have to pay more for it


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,099 ✭✭✭babybuilder


    krissovo wrote: »
    What’s happened is that the demand for EV’s has increased and the supply is low which equals high price.

    The Leaf 40 example above is a good one, in early 2019 you could buy a SVE leaf for ~€30k (list price) after grants. Once the stock of Kona’s, E-Niro’s & Ioniq’s dried up nissan raised the price by €1500.

    Even The 2nd hand market has gone crazy with old leaf’s appreciating in value.

    I paid for my Leaf in June that cost just over €28k for a SVE, took delivery for 192 and my car actually appreciated when I drove off the forecourt.

    Next year is a different story, Tesla Model 3’s are available, apparently plenty of Kona’s, e-Niro’s, Ioniq’s and ID3 will start shipping. Give it 3 years and the prices will normalise.

    €28k for sve - you got a great deal there. Cheapest I was quoted was 33k


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Regional East Moderators Posts: 8,059 Mod ✭✭✭✭liamog


    I shouldnt think we will get to this stage but in showrooms they could say something like

    " here is our entry level Zoe with a 66kw motor and 22kwh battery , its our cheapest model and its ideal for town driving and short trips.. but if you just follow me here is our Zoe 80kw motor model with 41kw-h battery it is more expensive but it does come with a range up to 400km on one charge"

    but they wont do that , they will not have the choice for the customer they will just have the 80kw motor 41kwh one brand new and if you want to go for the other one you wil have to buy t on the used car market.

    at least with ICE cars you have more of a choice in a car howroom - you pick your car you like and if you want one with a higher capacity petrol engine say, you can, but you have to pay more for it

    Sounds exactly like what we'll see from the ID.3 starting summer next year.
    3 choices of battery size, 45 kWh, 58 kWh, and 77 kWh. With your spec choice then available on top of that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    liamog wrote: »
    Sounds exactly like what we'll see from the ID.3 starting summer next year.
    3 choices of battery size, 45 kWh, 58 kWh, and 77 kWh. With your spec choice then available on top of that.

    yes, but being Volkswagen even the lowest model will come with a hefty price tag I reckon

    I saw the e-golf at a seminar the other week , cant remember the price but I think it was around 36grand - 10 grand dearer than the renault Zoe or maybe I am getting the price mixed up with the kona

    The Audi e-tron SUV at the same event was priced at 135k :O


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Regional East Moderators Posts: 8,059 Mod ✭✭✭✭liamog


    Widely expected to come in around €30,000 for the low spec entry spec. That's pretty competitive with the Golf that starts at €24,500 when you look at monthly ownership costs.


  • Posts: 2,799 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    As somebody said, it's like the iphone thing. Battery cars are promoted and priced for well to do who want to buy some sort of exclusivity. Before they would have some BMWs 530. I suspect what you'll find is that specs will go up every couple of years and the price will go up to match, and the fanboys will have to upgrade. Like iphones this will release cars to the second hand market, but still at inflated price.

    We will need to wait for the equivalent Samsung car, and then the Huawei car before there is any mass market.

    In short, battery cars are over priced because they can be.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 528 ✭✭✭VikingG


    Surely the reason that they are more expensive is that they sell less.... Any design costs, tooling, startup costs (NRE) is spread over far fewer cars. The current ratio of ICE Sales to Electric is around 50 to 1 .. that means that those startup costs are 50 times more expensive in an electric car. Think of it this way if those costs contributed €1000 to an ICE car .. it should be €50000 to an electric. Now I know it gets muddled with shared components etc but you get the idea.

    That is a huge markup that is applied to each electric car. I actually think that most auto companies (like Renault with the Zoe) are actually losing money with each sale.. but they are writing that off as they look at the long term goal.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    As somebody said, it's like the iphone thing. Battery cars are promoted and priced for well to do who want to buy some sort of exclusivity. Before they would have some BMWs 530. I suspect what you'll find is that specs will go up every couple of years and the price will go up to match, and the fanboys will have to upgrade. Like iphones this will release cars to the second hand market, but still at inflated price.

    We will need to wait for the equivalent Samsung car, and then the Huawei car before there is any mass market.

    In short, battery cars are over priced because they can be.

    I dont mind that, and why not. if people want to pay for name/build quality fair do's carry on, But lets just say at the moment the Renault Zoe is the 'samsung android or even motorolla' of BEV's the lowest price is €26k i believe .. madness.

    Not only rich people want to buy electric vehicles - we need to be at a stage of having some models to choose from but more staggering price range. starting with a nice realistic price for an entry model . reault could fit that bracket .. or even dare I say it something like Fiat, what they done with the Fiat punto years ago when you could pick up a shiny brand new 2000 Punto for 11K when other manufacturers cars were starting at 15k (I know because I scrapped in my old car and bought one)

    So I definately think probably Dacia could / might do something maybe fill that market maybe (look what they done recently with the Sandero in UK and Ireland market and look what a good seller that was for people wanting a budget entry level brand new car)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    VikingG wrote: »
    Surely the reason that they are more expensive is that they sell less.... Any design costs, tooling, startup costs (NRE) is spread over far fewer cars. The current ratio of ICE Sales to Electric is around 50 to 1 .. that means that those startup costs are 50 times more expensive in an electric car. Think of it this way if those costs contributed €1000 to an ICE car .. it should be €50000 to an electric. Now I know it gets muddled with shared components etc but you get the idea.

    That is a huge markup that is applied to each electric car. I actually think that most auto companies (like Renault with the Zoe) are actually losing money with each sale.. but they are writing that off as they look at the long term goal.

    If you have a company like renault, I should imagine you are pooling resources across the range. you are pooling (or should be) the profit margins from ICE and Diesal into the production now of the Zoe electric car and any other future developments in the pipe line.

    If you own a shop and have some product line that you have an offer on and are selling it cheaper then you recouperate your money you have lost on that product by spreading the money from the higher priced non sale items and it all (should) balance out - but its a win win , a win with the customers because they get their product at a sale price and a win for the shop because their special offers (that may have been struggling to sell) suddenly start flying out of the door


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 7,254 Mod ✭✭✭✭charlieIRL


    yes, but being Volkswagen even the lowest model will come with a hefty price tag I reckon

    I saw the e-golf at a seminar the other week , cant remember the price but I think it was around 36grand - 10 grand dearer than the renault Zoe or maybe I am getting the price mixed up with the kona

    The Audi e-tron SUV at the same event was priced at 135k :O

    We have a Zoe work car/van in work and I have an eGolf, all they have in common is that they are EV’s.

    There’s a massive difference in the quality of them and you really can’t really compare them. From the build quality to the extra gadgets on the golf, the Zoe is miles behind while still being a capable EV.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,841 ✭✭✭✭Andy From Sligo


    charlieIRL wrote: »
    We have a Zoe work car/van in work and I have an eGolf, all they have in common is that they are EV’s.

    There’s a massive difference in the quality of them and you really can’t really compare them. From the build quality to the extra gadgets on the golf, the Zoe is miles behind while still being a capable EV.

    I know , thats what I am trying to say. i bought a fiat Punto brand new in 2000 its plastics were cheap and flimsy the upholstery and seat support was cheap - it was a cheap car - but the punto filled a market , the people who wanted to own a brand new car for cheap.

    I feel the Renault Zoe is trying to fill that cheap market at the moment ... but the price is 26k so cannot compete not at the moment well not with an ICE car because if you were on a budget you would go for the 15k Clio petrol or even cheaper Dacia sandero.

    I bet your electric golf with its bells and whistles cost a lot more than the Zoe did of course its going to be better build quality.

    I not an expert on the prices. I am presuming your Zoe was around 26grand yes? .. and how much was the e-golf?

    I have not even test driven the Reanault zoe yet , not even sat in one (J.J. Burke renault main dealer in Ballinrobe have very kindly told me I am welcome to test drive one, one day even though I said I cannot afford one at the moment or even if I had no intention of buying one at the moment so thats good I want to take them up on that one day. But we presently own a Clio mk4 2016 and thats pretty plasticky and budget materials used in places so i am expecting the same of the Zoe to be honest, because its the cheapest EV on the market. Being the chaepest I wouldnt expect it to be high end


  • Registered Users Posts: 528 ✭✭✭VikingG


    If you have a company like renault, I should imagine you are pooling resources across the range. you are pooling (or should be) the profit margins from ICE and Diesal into the production now of the Zoe electric car and any other future developments in the pipe line.
    Companies don't pool resources in that way.. they will know the End to End costs of all components that go into a single model ( as well as the model variants). As they have 50 times less cars to spread the one off costs what they are doing is spreading the cost between the first time adopters and accepting some of the loss themselves.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,344 ✭✭✭✭starlit


    Are they likely to reduce the on the road price with or without the grant in a few years time when more ev's be on the road? Will prices be fairly standard as they are as hybrids seem more popular than ev's at the moment?


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    ...attery cars are promoted and priced for well to do who want to buy some sort of exclusivity. Before they would have some BMWs 530. I suspect what you'll find is that specs will go up every couple of years and the price will go up to match, and the fanboys will have to upgrade...

    I'm on my second LEAF now. Before the 1st LEAF bought new back in 2015 my car was a 250 quid jalopy and the one before that cost princely 2600. The one before that was a 175 yoyo FIAT.

    So no expensive Beemers for me before jumping to the other side. Actually I really liked the fact that I could get away driving cars like those.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Regional East Moderators Posts: 8,059 Mod ✭✭✭✭liamog


    EU Emissions rules from 2021 mean that manufacturers are going to have to start getting serious about selling zero emission vehicles.

    Each BEV VW sell in 2021 reduces their overall fine by upto €20,000. They can do that upto about 500,000 cars


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,136 ✭✭✭✭KCross


    liamog wrote: »
    EU Emissions rules from 2021 mean that manufacturers are going to have to start getting serious about selling zero lower emission vehicles.

    Each BEV(or PHEV) VW sell in 2021 reduces their overall fine by upto €20,000. They can do that upto about 500,000 cars

    FYP :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,099 ✭✭✭babybuilder


    liamog wrote: »
    EU Emissions rules from 2021 mean that manufacturers are going to have to start getting serious about selling zero emission vehicles.

    Each BEV VW sell in 2021 reduces their overall fine by upto €20,000. They can do that upto about 500,000 cars

    The car companies are being dragged screaming to the ev revolution solely due to the new emission regulations.


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