ABSTRACT
Modern electric vehicles (EVs) are well suited to most people's general transport needs. Despite this, their adoption at a large scale has been grindingly slow. What are the reasons for this?
Unlike most books which focus on the technical aspects of EV performance, this guide sets out the commercial and political barriers to their increased use and lays out the ways in which these barriers can be overcome. It begins by charting the rise of the internal combustion engine, and detailing the problems associated with it which are driving efforts to electrify transportation. It goes on to introduce readers to the main EV technologies and examines the key issue of energy storage and recharging infrastructure. The remaining chapters explore the cost-effectiveness of electric mobility, the differing adoption trajectories by which EVs may come to increase in prominence, and the way in which policy can be tailored to encourage this rise.
The book covers industrialized and emerging economy contexts, the latter of which have the greatest opportunities – and most urgent need – to take the EV development route. Requiring no specialist engineering knowledge to understand and written in an engaging, accessible style, this is a valuable primer and resource for people in business, policy or study who are keen to understand, encourage and capitalize on the transition to electric mobility.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |50 pages
Private Transport: Seizing the Initiative
chapter |25 pages
How Combustion Beat Electric
chapter |22 pages
Global Sustainability in Check
part |78 pages
Technological Feasibility
chapter |24 pages
Vehicle Propulsion
chapter |26 pages
Energy Storage
chapter |26 pages
The Electric Vehicle Recharging Infrastructure
part |79 pages
Electric Vehicle Roadmap