If I won the lottery, I'd buy one like a shot

Isn't it the most common building material?Some predictions say we'll all be living in mud huts soon too. So who knows.
That's a very low prediction, do you have a source?Some predictions say that the % market share of BEV's will be about 16% by 2030, so if true, it seems like the ICE isn't going away anytime soon.
Some predictions also say that BEV's will be a sort of v2.0 vehicle and FCEV's will be v3.0.
Some predictions say we'll all be living in mud huts soon too. So who knows.
That's a very low prediction, do you have a source?

No, I'm simply saying I'd buy one if I could afford it.That says a lot. What you are effectively saying is "I'd have one if they were so cheap as to be effectively free".
No, I'm simply saying I'd buy one if I could afford it.
When is the nuclear fusion powered car coming out.
100,000 miles on a bucket of sea water.
What's not to like.
Looking at the US numbers they expected the growth rate to slow from the rate seen in 2016-2018 until 2023. Which is just weird. The amount of additional capacity coming on line over that time is dramatically greater than 2015-2020.Can't find the original link I was looking at, but I think it was from the SMMT.
Anyway, here is a link from JP Morgan with their predictions, note, these are worldwide numbers.
https://www.jpmorgan.com/global/research/electric-vehicles
Looking at the US numbers they expected the growth rate to slow from the rate seen in 2016-2018 until 2023. Which is just weird. The amount of additional capacity coming on line over that time is dramatically greater than 2015-2020.
That report does think that half new cars will be some form of EV or hybrid by 2030, but they are including mild hybrids, which are little different from start-stop systems.
it's always been ten years away, and still is.
I'd imagine that many people like me will be questioning whether they really need a car at all anymore, that's no particular bad thing either.
Ah, but will the government let you avoid having one, asking with all the tax you would avoi , and all the money you would keep out of your local economy?
Look at the current pandemic : despite the health evidence to the contrary, and ignoring that many people can work from home effectively, the government are encouraging us to return to our cars, so that we can be taxed on fuel, spend in cafes and sandwich shops, and the like.