ian4x4 said:
Do you have to be either a business (tax) user, or an engineering enthusiast, to successfully (economically) own a EV or PHEV vehicle.
Cars are not purely economic decisions. There are lifestyle, aesthetic, ego and environmental considerations just to name a few.
I just did some maths in my head when I bought the Outlander, and figured the premium to go electric was not going to pay itself off in its life time. It didn't bother me in the least though, because the difference was negligible, and because I wanted to both have an environmental impact and I liked the silence of electric cars.
The car is not for everyone. It's well known that hybrid cars are the same or less economical on a long freeway drive as compared to a well designed car of the same class. Maby keeps pointing this out as if it was something new, or something most people wouldn't know before buying one. However, for the person with the right usage patterns, there is a lot of appeal. I am one of them. Almost all my driving is under 50km per day. If I went off peak electricity, I could get a full recharge for AUD90c, (GBP45p, USD60c).
But at the end of the day, I bought it because I liked how quiet it was, and felt I was doing something good for the planet.