Why Toyota Is Intentionally "Falling Behind" On EVs

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  • čas přidán 27. 12. 2023
  • In the last few years, seemingly every car company has begun investing heavily in electric vehicles. Ford said it would “lead America’s shift to EVs.” GM said it would invest $35 billion into EVs by 2035. And Volkswagon is dropping $193 billion on battery research. But not Toyota. Instead of pouring billions of dollars into electric vehicles, the company has been doubling down on hybrids. Some people think they’re making a grave mistake. But Toyota says it’s been part of its plan all along.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @mas7833
    @mas7833 Před 3 měsíci +767

    I would say that Toyota’s attitude is pretty much like mine. They’ll sell them when it’s time and I’ll buy one when it’s time.

    • @audiquagaming
      @audiquagaming Před 3 měsíci +36

      I would take a Toyota over any EV any day oh I own a Lexus hybrid 😂

    • @HermanWillems
      @HermanWillems Před 3 měsíci +18

      Time is now.

    • @randallnguyen7405
      @randallnguyen7405 Před 3 měsíci +4

      I still love my prius prime. I still save a bunch of money on gas.

    • @opmacace523
      @opmacace523 Před 3 měsíci +11

      @@HermanWillemsno

    • @Jack908r
      @Jack908r Před 3 měsíci +7

      Its the chicken or the egg problem. And its not even really that as oil industries keep pushing back against the switch.

  • @dtibor5903
    @dtibor5903 Před 3 měsíci +618

    Toyota does what makes the most sense. Other parts of the world is absolutely not ready for EVs. Here in eastern europe it's pretty hard to find any fast charger outside of larger cities.

    • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
      @Skank_and_Gutterboy Před 3 měsíci

      And they don't work when it's cold, Chicago proved that.

    • @Valoric
      @Valoric Před 3 měsíci

      The mining and refinery industry isn’t ready for EVs. It’s impossible to scale EVs to global demand to replace gas cars in the next few decades. Better making train infrastructure than EVs. Better put the energy into making Nuclear power a thing again. Better off picking up trashing off the beach than wasting one more god damn second on terrible battery chemistries that aren’t ready for roads.

    • @busetgadapet
      @busetgadapet Před 3 měsíci

      it is in early adoption for fuck sake, just like phone you think internet in early smartphone day are available in rural areas? so just because internet cant reach rural, and was expensive, we should just stop using internet ? lucky you arent working in government or we wont even have better internet like now if people give up easily to any new tech early struggle

    • @Mr21December2012
      @Mr21December2012 Před 3 měsíci +23

      chicken or the egg dilemma.
      In the next 10 years also eastern europe will get a sufficient fast charging network

    • @dtibor5903
      @dtibor5903 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@Mr21December2012 yes probably and I hope so

  • @baronvonjo1929
    @baronvonjo1929 Před 4 měsíci +738

    I dont blame Toyota for not going EV crazy atm cause I keep seeing the struggle the Ford, GM, VW, Mercedes, Nissan and the Korean brands have. So many things to learn. I would personally just be investing into R&D and see what happens as lots of those other brands are burning through money for each EV they sell.

    • @shadowninja6689
      @shadowninja6689 Před 4 měsíci +44

      The problem is it takes 3 years on average to bring a new car to market, and for a vehicle that's an EV instead of ICE like they're used to working with it'll probably be longer than the average turnaround. So yes, Toyota is really risking screwing themselves over by not investing in EV's now. Public sentiment can shift in favor of EV's faster than Toyota can shift their lineups towards EVs. And that's not even counting all the countries with bans on ICE vehicle sales after 2030, which Toyota is basically forfeiting their sales in by not shifting to EV's now.

    • @tribalypredisposed
      @tribalypredisposed Před 4 měsíci +41

      Sounds like you could be management for one of those companies. Being completely wrong 24-7 is what they do. The problem with your idea here is that it just takes a lot of time to ramp EV production and to learn how to make EVs well, efficiently, and cost effectively. A lot of time is what these companies do not have. Yes, there are so many things to learn, and a lot of those things are ONLY learned by doing, on the factory floor, and not in the R&D labs. I worked at Tesla for some of their learning process.
      Two companies make a profit selling EVs, Tesla and BYD, and both are massively vertically integrated, making most of the parts of the car themselves. Toyota is pretty vertically integrated so they have that advantage over most legacy automakers, but they still will need an enormous amount of battery cells to transition to EVs, and the mines to supply the factories for those cells do not exist at the moment, and the cell factories also do not exist. I estimate Toyota needs to make five million EVs in 2028 to maintain current market share, and that would mean about 350 gigawatt hours of battery cells, and really you would be lucky, if you knew where to mine for the minerals needed already today, to have permits in hand to start developing the mines in 2028. Tesla already has their materials contracts in hand. BYD does too. As for the battery cell factories, construction needs to start no later than 2025 if you want them fully ramped by 2028.
      Yeah, all those other companies are struggling, and so is Toyota with their EV, because it is not so easy and they really lack the core competencies for EVs, which is a lot of top level software engineering expertise, and then battery cell and pack and electric motor expertise. Unfortunately they need to learn by manufacturing EVs, but they waited so long that very few want to buy their EVs while they struggle to make a vaguely competitive product.
      At this point, Toyota is a dead company walking. There is no way they can ramp production and figure out how to make competitive EVs at competitive prices in time. By 2028 almost no one will want Toyota ICE cars, or their hybrids, or their EVs.

    • @runnerxa
      @runnerxa Před 4 měsíci +48

      You really think the countries can enforce the ICE ban after 2030? I doubt it because the economics are not in favor of the EVs. I bet that the ICE ban will get extended multiple times especially in countries that lack the charging infrastructure.

    • @itisabird
      @itisabird Před 4 měsíci +26

      Most of the engineering needs that Tesla and BYD had were learnt by Toyota half a century ago. You forget that they already make some of the best cars in the world. Making it electric is just a minor percentage of the engineering needs of a car. Also, don't forget that they are the top selling brand on hybrids, wich are electric cars with batteries recharged with fossil fuels. For them it is as simple as replacing the small battery with a big one.
      Regarding software, it depends. The amount of software that Tesla has is staggering, but not really necessary. High end cars are sold to people looking to have the shiniest thing, but the majority of cars are sold to poorer people that don't really need that many things. We've lived all our lives with just an stereo, and for that and the standard management of the vehicule you don't need 1000 engineers.

    • @tribalypredisposed
      @tribalypredisposed Před 4 měsíci +24

      @@itisabird I worked at Tesla, and no, Toyota has very little of the technology and engineering that Tesla has. An EV is also definitely not super similar to an ICE car. The difference between a car and a horse and carriage is also just the motor and transmission and steering wheel, but only one out of hundreds of carriage companies survived to make cars for long (Studebaker). At Tesla, the software engineers are not just for the UI, they are all over the production lines making the robots work better and faster too, and then of course working on the full self driving and so on. Tesla is a Silicon Valley tech company that primarily makes cars at the moment. Tesla bought Grohman Automated Engineering which was the world leading engineering company for automated production at the time, and the go to company for the German automakers. They combined that knowledge with the huge expertise Tesla has in software engineering and with the SpaceX/Tesla metallurgy expertise, and with getting first pick every year of the best engineers in the world, and that put them way way ahead of Toyota.

  • @thomasroewer5673
    @thomasroewer5673 Před 3 měsíci +298

    Plugin hybrid is the way to go for most. I have a Prius Prime and use it in EV mode for most of the time when driving to work. But unlike with a full EV, I don't have to worry about running out of charge when taking a longer trip. It's really the best of both worlds.

    • @bradhaines3142
      @bradhaines3142 Před 3 měsíci +53

      i dont understand the fascination with pure electric. its so unrealistic for so many use cases, but a hybrid is almost entirely beneficial.

    • @gigirobinet2879
      @gigirobinet2879 Před 3 měsíci

      @@bradhaines3142it’s a trend for sheeps

    • @busetgadapet
      @busetgadapet Před 3 měsíci +5

      people dont buy ev in this time for long trip, why people still cant get understand this easy single fact?

    • @canwelook
      @canwelook Před 3 měsíci +26

      Most people want the convenience of having a car that handles all situations ICE cars currently handle... including long trips (not to mention fast & convenient refills from extensive networks, working as per normal in all weather conditions, street parking without connection to the grid, etc, etc, etc).
      Why is this so hard for ev cultists to understand?

    • @basilyashchenko5389
      @basilyashchenko5389 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Absolutely agree.

  • @ariorobotics8583
    @ariorobotics8583 Před 3 měsíci +311

    Look at direct injection. VW was one of the first to implement it with many issues. Toyota took a more relaxed approach by ironing out the technology and it ended up being reliable.

    • @HermanWillems
      @HermanWillems Před 3 měsíci +15

      WRONG, the Bz4X is NOT ironed out and NOT reliable at all. Just look at the many complaints of users. It's a good car, just a very bad electric car. Many things that should be GOOD at an EV to be a good EV are just BAD at Toyota. Their whole battery heat management is very bad. It can cold and hotgate at the same time. Which is actually very weird. One part of the battery is too cold, and other one is too hot. :) haha

    • @ariorobotics8583
      @ariorobotics8583 Před 3 měsíci +77

      ​@@HermanWillems The bz4x is a compliance car

    • @HNRichard
      @HNRichard Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@HermanWillems US BZ4X has the bad batteries, the rest of us got the good BZ4X which honestly didn't have major problems at all on the EV systems. This also includes the Chinese sedan version they worked with BYD; the BZ3 too. No problems there as far as I know.

    • @Hernsama
      @Hernsama Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@HermanWillemsactually he was referring to Direct Injection. And if anything the BZ4 is a perfect example. They rushed and looked what happened its on your shit list. They should have waited but luckily they are making the right move.

    • @anestacom
      @anestacom Před 3 měsíci

      Toyota was successful at catching up because during that time they have strong leadership (Ohno/Shingo and Toyoda that bought into the idea) that relentlessly focus on quality/improvement and bottoms up approach on quality. With all the recalls they have after 2000s, I doubt the culture is still there.

  • @zeroreality
    @zeroreality Před 3 měsíci +75

    You didn't answer the question in the title of the video! "Why" is Toyota falling behind? You went into how they are not investing in EVs at the same rate as other companies, but not "why" they aren't doing that. Your video should be titled "How come Toyota is intentionally falling behind on EVs".

    • @nami1540
      @nami1540 Před 26 dny

      Do you know of DeArrow? It is a brobser plugin that replaces catchy titles and thumbnails of YT videos by the one the community voted on. Thogether with Sponsotblock (skipping sponsored video segments) it is absolutely great. I will upload your suggestion.

    • @chadhaire1711
      @chadhaire1711 Před 23 dny +8

      How about another title " EV's SUCK"

    • @Shambolicoholic
      @Shambolicoholic Před 22 dny +7

      5:52

    • @philipbrown9006
      @philipbrown9006 Před 5 dny +1

      Other companies are losing billions throwing good money after bad. Toyota decided not to.

    • @tjjavier
      @tjjavier Před 5 dny +1

      He did answer it. As the user above said, 5:52

  • @Martian74
    @Martian74 Před 4 měsíci +176

    A PHEV (Plugin Hybrid EV) seems like the best choice at the moment. Short range on battery only and then unlimited long distance driving with gas. An electric vehicle writer getting upset with Toyota is obvious, as it is his bread and butter (soy and lentil?) to write about EVs. I'm definitely considering a hybrid for my wife.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci +13

      They will soon have no resale value. They are more expensive than an ICE car. They are more complex with two drive trains. Worse they catch fire more often than ICE cars True ev are only 0.0045 of all car fires. Hybrids and ICE had 99.55%. US NHTSA 2022. Ev are supperior in longevity, cost of operation and they cost less than many comparable ICE suv, cars, etc.

    • @tivertontom
      @tivertontom Před 4 měsíci +5

      consumer reports says the plug in hybrids are the lowest in reliability, truck evs after that

    • @Martian74
      @Martian74 Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@EnriqueThiele cars don't catch fire often, I have never seen one and are more likely in old cars with rotten fuel lines so EVs are unlikely to be in that category yet, once they are left in a barn and rats chew on their power lines and short out wires, we will see them catching up. EVs just have too short a driving range for me to be even considered. Hybrids have far better range and good fuel economy.

    • @yulusleonard985
      @yulusleonard985 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Hybrid have problematic designs. There are reason why hybrid are more likely to catch fire, like using passive cooler for batteries and inverter and storing batteries inside compartment instead outside like BEV. Also smaller batteries means faster degradation.

    • @williammeek4078
      @williammeek4078 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Hybrids are a fool’s bargain. Resale value of anything with a gas tank will be very low in five years as it will be clear to everyone by that time that pure EV is the endgame.

  • @ccarniver
    @ccarniver Před 3 měsíci +79

    Toyota's HSD is the envy of the industry, it'd be foolish for them to throw away this card just because others had to

    • @toyotaprius79
      @toyotaprius79 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Ach! Don't you be foolish!
      The HSD has been squandered for two decades now. It's completely adaptable for plugin batteries but Toyota resisted and compromised it every step of the way
      And you omitted how the HSD is an owned patent which makes hybrids more expensive for consumers, especially if Ford payes Toyota dues, or if Mitsubishi has to spend billions on it's own

    • @ccarniver
      @ccarniver Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@toyotaprius79 the patent is key, HSD is just superior to any other implementations of hybrid powertrain, both in terms of power delivery and simplicity

    • @zomgneedaname
      @zomgneedaname Před 2 měsíci +1

      The Risk is being kodak'd. Y'all gotta check out the Byd DM-i powertrain, goes entirely around the HSD patent lock

    • @jensenraylight8011
      @jensenraylight8011 Před 24 dny +1

      @@zomgneedaname what so special about EV anyway, it gets you from point A to B,
      the difference is only the Fuel.
      This is a Car not a Smartphone,
      and Toyota Can produce EV,
      don't act as if they're still at stone age, couldn't figure out how EV Works.
      While Kodak, literally just straight up didn't want to sell their new Technological marvel,
      Toyota, ford, Porsche, all of them have EV lineups, nothing special
      they're the first to realize that people Want hybrid not EV,
      so when the Age of EV come, why would they become the last to Pivot?
      They're ahead in knowing the market demand.
      Unlike Tesla that had the nerve after selling Less car, they shamelessly pump their stock so obviously
      to be way bigger than Toyota.

  • @GethinColes
    @GethinColes Před 3 měsíci +49

    I live in rural Australia. Ideal car for here is a small battery hybrid. Battery for local runs, hybrid or range extender for longer. I dont think anyone is making this, and its puzzling. A range extender that can maintain charge at 80kmh would be fine, because anywhere that you can go faster has charging stations available

    • @genericreference6969
      @genericreference6969 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV but it isnt the smallest of vehicles

    • @GethinColes
      @GethinColes Před 3 měsíci

      @@genericreference6969 I'll check it out!

    • @GethinColes
      @GethinColes Před 3 měsíci

      @@genericreference6969 I see it's drivetrain is still directly connected to the wheels, I wonder if you dropped all that weight and had a petrol-electric drivetrain how the weight savings offset the conversion losses.

    • @lapin46
      @lapin46 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@GethinColes the engine is actually coupled with a clutch to the drive train. Below some 60-70 km/h, faster for newer models, the engine drives a generator with no direct connection the wheels itself. The generated electricity is used to drive the car. Above a certain speed, the engine is coupled to the wheels with a clutch directly driving the wheels, but also driving the generator. This way power can be provided to the electrically driven rear axle as well. czcams.com/video/rntjceP-XPE/video.htmlsi=8_QHwKMFkxuFxlC4

    • @by010
      @by010 Před 3 měsíci

      Chevy volt or smh?

  • @jkid4855
    @jkid4855 Před 3 měsíci +251

    it's really simple. They are delaying EV until they can control the battery tech that made sense to them. Once their solid state battery is up to par, they'll unlease their EVs. They're just not idiots who follow twitter trends.

    • @HVM_fi
      @HVM_fi Před 3 měsíci +39

      Yeah, Toyota's solid state tech is only 3-5 years from production! -And had been like that last 20 years...

    • @carlosandleon
      @carlosandleon Před 3 měsíci +5

      Also EVa are impractical for most people

    • @HVM_fi
      @HVM_fi Před 3 měsíci +13

      @@carlosandleon Lol, nope, only people who tow their boat 600km in one go.

    • @carlosandleon
      @carlosandleon Před 3 měsíci +8

      @@HVM_fi Im not driving 80 km to the next charging port bro

    • @jkid4855
      @jkid4855 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@HVM_fi and if they can't get it right, they will keep making excuses why EV sucks. Toyota can afford to wait.

  • @lemagicalpotato8318
    @lemagicalpotato8318 Před 3 měsíci +14

    Good on Toyota for realizing the practicality shortfalls of current EV tech. I would be more excited about EVs if there existed battery tech ready for mass production that allowed batteries to be made of at least mostly renewable materials with a solid and inexpensive pipeline for recycling those batteries once they reach end of life. Until then, we are kind of just shifting the problem from the air to the landfill. Hybrids strike a nice balance between better carbon emissions and dealing with the reality of existing infrastructure and highly variable global climates. Hope they can keep doing R&D for EVs to keep reducing repair costs and improving efficiency and reliability

  • @josephsager9425
    @josephsager9425 Před 3 měsíci +152

    As a big car guy, I was really excited for EV's when it was bleeding edge tech, but my concerns have been growing for years now about cost.
    I think if EV's are adopted too quickly, they'll become something only the rich can afford.
    After I heard about Toyota's strategy, the more I think about it, the more I'm like, "yes - Hybrids are a necessary gap *if* America wants to keep it's car-centric nature."
    That said, I believe things that would reduce our car dependency, like a massive investment in mass transit and laws that mandate employers offer remote work are the way forward.
    Because even an EV is just another car, and cars are a hugely inefficient way of moving people around.
    As a fan of cars, I want to keep cars alive as something you drive for fun if you enjoy that hobby, not something everyone needs to drive to get anywhere, even if they hate driving.

    • @Sacto1654
      @Sacto1654 Před 3 měsíci

      I'm not sure if mandatory remote work is a completely good idea. There's always fear some hacker could break the encryption used by the Cisco AnyConnect VPN software for remote work (AnyConnect is a very popular connection sofware for remote workers) and cause no end of havoc, which could quickly end the age of remote work in many cases.

    • @unconventionalideas5683
      @unconventionalideas5683 Před 3 měsíci

      The problem is that a huge and growing percentage of Americans don’t even have a license to drive, so America keeping its car centric culture is likely to fall away anyway, because if very few know how to drive and nobody is interested in Autonomous Cars, well, how can cars logically be a major part of transportation into the future?

    • @L8nitedave
      @L8nitedave Před 3 měsíci

      The problem isn't so much EV vs hybrid as much as it is new car demand and the evolution curve on both. The hard truth is the EV evolution curve is closer to sustainable long term than ICE cars. But hitting the sweet spot of infrastructure when consumers learn how to use EVs becomes the target. Selling more long lasting ICE cars makes that target demographic longer and easier to hit for them while everyone else is committed to expensive EVs.

    • @billant2
      @billant2 Před 3 měsíci +2

      It's definitely only for those who own a home and can do overnight charging in their warm garage. Most of those living in apartments and condos don't have overnight charging available. So yes, at the current higher prices EV's are definitely for the well off folks.

    • @SimonEllwood
      @SimonEllwood Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@@billant2You do not need a garage. An off-street parking spot and a Level II charger and you are good to go.

  • @UrbanNaturalist
    @UrbanNaturalist Před 4 měsíci +12

    Toyota is right, also their hybrids are way ahead of the others. The Prius transmission is an ECVT, without a belt to wear out. It has an ingenious way of using a planetary gear set and electric motors to remove pumps and clutches from the automatic transmission.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci

      Hybrids are justn ICE cars with a small battery asit. Hybrids are the most prone car type to catch a fire. They are too complex, and they can not compete with any EV.

    • @UrbanNaturalist
      @UrbanNaturalist Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@EnriqueThiele sure, but for most of the country, they only work as second cars. I’ve loved the idea of electric cars for decades, but I’m not in the place to own an electric car as an extra vehicle. It would not fit our driving needs. The charging infrastructure is not there yet and some more environmentally friendly battery tech will be coming soon that will allow the masses to get on board. For now, we’ll let you pay more early on to fund the improvement of those issues. I’ll keep my old Toyotas running until the tech improves.✌️

    • @kalmmonke5037
      @kalmmonke5037 Před 3 měsíci

      although there is no evidence for humans causing climate change beyond natural climate change, there is evidence and some very apparently suspicious artificial chemical stuff, which is now known to be definitely harmful, such as dirtier forms of combustion, tire wear dust(see xenoestrogens, microplastics, etc) , wiper fluid etc. best way to use non fully recyalable limited battery supply (which is almost always never recycled ) is to have small combustion charging battery and electric assisted turbo in lightweight areo car. weight makes it less crash safe for everyone involved in crash, worsens road wear damage and tire wear , exponentially, and makes preserving momentum around turns less possible to minimize degradation of battery from regenerative braking , then powering up again after regenerating the energy less efficiently than how it would be in preserving momentum around a turn. . ev are heavy because high weight per energy , you arnt using all that energy at a moment of driving but you are carrying all thr weight. instant torque makes it worse. @EnriqueThiele having the sedan jump up to have its structurally strong parts lower in the car, hit the strong parts of other car before crash, would also have higher safety with all the supremacy in balanced values of sedans. a lotus style lightweight agile momentum preservaton sporty driving can be integrated into encouraging effceint low emission driivng to make driving fun and safer, too recent honda insight is closest we got to this ideal , but they intentionally didnt do their best becayse they were afraid people wouldnt buy their car as much if they made a aesthetically weird shape like prius , they wanted to get people whos buy prius if only it didnt look weird . they knew almost every who says they care about emissions actually do not care(mostly because low trust in "the science" and its funding), and they are already far less than 5 percent of all customers , so they comprimised. noone praises honda, they praise tesla for making a gossip attracting toy r

    • @UrbanNaturalist
      @UrbanNaturalist Před 3 měsíci

      @@kalmmonke5037 Honda is years behind Toyota when it comes to hybrids. Ahead of Toyota in EV market though.

    • @kalmmonke5037
      @kalmmonke5037 Před 3 měsíci

      for example honda didnt make 2017 insight areodynamic because they were appealin gto people who wouldve brought prius it prius didnt look weird. its also a wider car. if they tried to make it more effceintt they probably could have @@UrbanNaturalist

  • @volkhen0
    @volkhen0 Před 3 měsíci +39

    Honestly I thought it was a conspiracy theory that oil companies blocked development of electric cars. Yet it seems it was true. This time about NiMH batteries. I’ve heard similar story about Li-Ion batteries.

    • @h2835
      @h2835 Před 2 měsíci +3

      It does not matter even if they did block the development of EV-s. In the end the major limiting factor is the power grid.
      Example: Ukraine now has the option of exporting up to 550 MW of electric energy into the EU. A single TESLA supercharger cable uses 150 kW. So if we use all this electricity to charge electric cars we can charge around 3600 at the same time.
      As a ballpark figure: to use EV-s you need to have a 96 spot charging station for every 8 pump petrol station. That 96 spot charging station will use up 14.4 MW at full output. A nuclear power plant is capable of delivering around 2000 MW at optimum performance. How many petrol stations do you have in your country? How much power is needed to swap those out for charging stations?
      How many Nuclear power plants do you need to have enough power for all of these?
      Solar and Wind is NOT an option here, as you need this power even at night when there is no wind. So you could build batteries, but it is cost prohibitive.
      Oh, and you also need connection points from these power plants to the grid. So more high voltage power lines all across the country...

    • @aabb55777
      @aabb55777 Před měsícem

      Oil companies didn't. See my comment on the patent shown at 2:35.

    • @nami1540
      @nami1540 Před 26 dny +2

      @@h2835 Well it will need to get expanded and it is within the realms of our possibilites. You are just suggesting not to try it because it has not been of priority in your country. Look at Denmark, for example. Thei have no struggle with the grid even though they heavily bet on EVs and they use and export mostly wind power. In Germany it will still take a few decades but it is a finite investment. Maybe also think about the extensive oil and gas infrastructure. It was established historically but it is also quite an engineering effort. We have natural gas pipes in all streets and refineries and tanks for gasoline spread all around the country.

    • @steffengustavsen9678
      @steffengustavsen9678 Před 16 dny +1

      @@h2835 Not true. Here in Norway electricity consumption will only increase 6% if everyone get a Tesla model s. The same amount we would save if every house switched to heat pumps.

  • @someguy2135
    @someguy2135 Před 4 měsíci +42

    No mention of choosing both in one? Toyota's Prius Prime and RAV4 Prime plug-in hybrids! No range anxiety. Enough EV range for most people for driving around town during the day and then charging overnight. No charging hassles on long trips, since you can then just pretend that you just have a regular hybrid or ICE car and gas up as needed.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci

      Consumers will move very soon out of the hybrid vehicles. Too complex, too expensive, lackluster accereration. Hybrids are the vehicles most prone to fire. just google it.

  • @jamesodell3064
    @jamesodell3064 Před 4 měsíci +32

    Toyota also has the Prius Prime and RAV4 Prime. I am considering the Prius Prime when I replace my Camry. I would drive all electric over 95% of the time with the 44 mile all electric range. Charge in the garage with 120V saving the cost of the special charger. When I want to travel I would not have to worry about finding a charging station.
    I would expect over time as batteries get better and hopefully cheaper the all electric range will increase.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Před 4 měsíci +3

      I mentioned them in a comment before I saw yours. This looks like you get the best of both worlds. They get about 40 miles of range in the EV mode after an overnight charge. Availablilty for both models means a long wait time to buy one. The only advantage of a pure EV would be the fact that they do not need oil changes, and have less to go wrong. Toyota has such a great track record for reliability, that that wouldn't worry me, though.

    • @christophers707
      @christophers707 Před 4 měsíci +1

      just get a plain hybrid look up plugin reliability its awful might as well get an ev

    • @lukeclifton4392
      @lukeclifton4392 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@someguy2135”You can’t have your cake and eat it too!”… that’s seems to be the case with PHEV too!
      Yes you can run EV mode all day and every day for normal commutes, it’s fine!! On the other hand the extra weight of both a medium sized battery, an engine and the projected lifespan of the battery (because it’s being used like an EV, a lot of cycles) ends up being no more efficient than a normal hybrid.
      You have to think of Hybrid battery chemistry like a capacitor (it’s a different chemistry to EV batteries). Hybrid batteries are smaller, less weight=more efficient and last longer. The Hybrid battery’s efficient sizing is just adequate enough to store “lost” energy (not just from braking) and deliver it back to the “an appropriately sized” power train under situations where the engine is least efficient.
      PHEV vehicles on the other hand use undersized engines and RELY on the Hybrid side to boost the engines performance… so why have the weight of the engine there in the first place??

    • @jamesodell3064
      @jamesodell3064 Před 4 měsíci

      Good point. It will be four or five years before I need a new car. Perhaps by then Toyota will have worked out the bugs. I will check their reliability the and make my decision. @@christophers707

    • @linusa2996
      @linusa2996 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Just get a straight hybrid Prius. it's cheaper and just as reliable or more so.

  • @PP-xy9bg
    @PP-xy9bg Před 4 měsíci +14

    So, you think EVs are green? If it were only true, but as far as data shows (from mining, production and maintenance) EVs are worse for the environment by a lot.

    • @PP-xy9bg
      @PP-xy9bg Před 4 měsíci

      Not to mention the energy mix used for charging, mostly coming from fossil fuels. And no, it is hard to offset that by “better” efficiency of the electric motors.

    • @RavarsenBlogspot
      @RavarsenBlogspot Před 3 měsíci

      It is definitely worse currently.
      In the future when the tech matures, it’ll be the opposite

    • @jamesphillips2285
      @jamesphillips2285 Před 3 měsíci +1

      What about mining required just to fill up your ICE vehicle every week?
      "And no, it is hard to offset that by “better” efficiency of the electric motors."
      Power plant (coal/gas, doesn't matter): 40% efficient.
      grid (assuming 15% losses): 85% efficient.
      EV efficiency: 90%
      -> system efficiency (0.4)(0.85)(.9)x100%= 30.6%
      Show me an ICE, or even hybrid, vehicle that beats 30% efficiency.

    • @PP-xy9bg
      @PP-xy9bg Před 3 měsíci

      @@jamesphillips2285 Mining for rare earth minerals for the battery is seriosuly more dirty than mining for iron for example. EVs and ICE cars have similar components, excluding the battery. Efficiency, by itself will not solve the issue of dirty production, lack of recycling and failing infrastructure. Plus, you should know that your claimed efficiency is only in given climate conditions. Also, there is efficiency of converting electrical energy to mechanical by the motors (highly efficient) and converting electrical energy to chemical and vice versa - less efficient. Then you have many variables of chargers’ efficiency, which hard to calculate on global level as some chargers could be 90% efficient and others could be 80%.
      All in all, EVs should be more efficient, however this will not be a huge impact. The difference would be smaller than claimed. This combined with the fact, that even if we stop driving any cars, right now, we will barely make a meaningful dent in CO2 emmisions, questions why we are trying to solve the problem with EVs. There are much better and quicker wins.
      Meanwhile, if people just stop driving SUVs and stop buying new cars every 3 years, it will cover for a greater CO2 reduction than prodcuing and driving EVs.
      But that would require change in life-style. And this is what we all need to understand - change will not come just from technology - we need to give up stuff. 3000 kg electric SUV is not better than my 10 years old city car with 1.0L gas engine, that serves all my needs on the cost on much lower emissions (during life time) of the huge and heavy SUV.
      Which heavy SUV causes secondary emissions by increasing the wear and tear on roads, parkings, etc. Even if not an SUV, EVs are heavier on average.
      Basics physics will tell you - if you want economy and efficiency, you need to go down in weight - not up.
      Even if you claim, well EVs are 40% more efficient and you go 20% in weight, you’r already killing your benefits.
      I don’t know why I am writing that as I pretty sure that everyone who believes in EVs wouldn’t listen to basic, high school level physics and will continue on that myth.
      But finally, I would like to say: until a few years ago, we were brainwashed on how bad are normal AA batteries and how we need to bring to the supermarket for recycling. And now, we are brining our remote control’s batteries for recycling to the supermarket with an EV that has a 1000kg battery in it without any hope of recycling program. And don’t give me the: “But we’ll use the old EVs batteries for seocndary storage.” Where is that? Where are the govt. programs for that? Is it feasibel? If yes, why it is not already done en mass? You think corporations would loose money if it were profitable?
      So, please drive our EVs and think you’re doing something good, because if you start thinking about the reality - it will very qucikly become unpleasant and spoil your happines.

    • @oatlegOnYt
      @oatlegOnYt Před 2 měsíci

      @@jamesphillips2285 In the ICE you need to add the loses of the transformation and distribution from oil, to fuel, to the ICE car.

  • @otus_
    @otus_ Před 3 měsíci +8

    around here (Africa, Southern Africa, Botswana), Toyota leads sales with an all petrol/diesel lineup, we simply dont have enought electricty to charge our phones and cars., probably the same case for all of the developing world, not enough electricity and I am talking about the coal made stuff, not that new solar green clean eletricity.

    • @jamesvandamme7786
      @jamesvandamme7786 Před měsícem +1

      I bet you have sun in Botswana. No need to import petrol.

  • @elliot3751
    @elliot3751 Před 3 měsíci +19

    As someone who just bought a new car.
    I had the options of looking for An EV, Hybrid or Regular ICE car.
    I did so much research I did a lot of comparing and contrasting.
    I didn’t budget myself too strictly but I wanted a car at or below $35,000.
    I would’ve LOVED an EV but the only ones under that price (at the time) were the Nissan Leaf and Chevrolet Bolt, both which did not meet my standards or expectations.
    I got a chance to test drive both and hated it.
    I also looked at a used Model 3, test drove it and was surprised and loved it!
    It was around my $35,000 budget. But insurance cost for them was too high, even with the Tesla Insurance. As well I did the cost for maintenance and while I would spend anything on oil changes, the cost of replacing tires literally just cost the same as oil changes throughout the years because I didn’t know EV tires were very expensive.
    As well I drive a lot in my field of work and range for EVs does not compare to ICE cars as well I can’t afford to stay at a charging station for 30 mins while working.
    So I went for Hybrids. It was honestly very shocking how much I liked them.
    Most I saw were within my budget and the range was very good!
    No need for Charging (I didn’t get a PHEV) and the maintenance was cheap since I usually do my own maintenance.
    I love an EV but it’s not viable for everyone yet.
    Hopefully one day I can own one and not worry about any of my complaints but for now, I think Hybirds and ICE are the way to go for me.

    • @coleeto2
      @coleeto2 Před měsícem

      You were making sense up until tires. Cost of ownership for an EV has been lower for years now. Depending where you live hybrids make a great option.
      If Toyota actually cared about the environment they would be making more PHEV, there is currently a 2 year waiting list to get one, so they can’t blame a lack of demand

  • @shattered115
    @shattered115 Před 3 měsíci +17

    The electric grid of the USA is not ready to support a large number of EVs. Places like California have a grid that can barely meet its current needs,

    • @coleeto2
      @coleeto2 Před měsícem +2

      EVs can actually improve the stability of the grid, it was studied years ago with way smaller batteries. V2G just needs to be implemented and networked.

    • @shattered115
      @shattered115 Před měsícem +2

      @@coleeto2The problem now is have we are we putting the cart before the horse? Where I live the line voltage drops 12-15 volts during peak A/C use in the summer. The grid struggles. That is in a area with mostly natural gas water heaters, ranges, and ovens.

    • @jamesvandamme7786
      @jamesvandamme7786 Před měsícem +1

      @@shattered115People mostly charge at home, at night. That evens out the load on the grid.

    • @shattered115
      @shattered115 Před měsícem

      @@jamesvandamme7786It does for now. But what is needed to have 50% of all motor vehicles be EVs. Also, the ability to charge at home is the realm of the middle class suburbanite. Urban residents and apartment dwellers often don't have their own parking spaces.

    • @the-gas-station
      @the-gas-station Před 29 dny +1

      @@jamesvandamme7786 Not even 3 weeks after CA passed its "all electric by 2035," it declared an emergency Flex Alert, *specifically* mentioning to not charge EVs at home, during the heatwave as to not overburden the grid.
      I've seen the study. On paper, having grid stability by removing the trough at night is technically better on hardware maintenance, but the grid itself is not set up to generate the power needed, especially during peak uses. This also doesn't take into account the millions of people that DON'T have EV chargers at home due to either not setting up their garage in their SFR to do so, or living in a non-SFR property like a Condo, Apartment, Duplex, etc. Many white collar workers who still don't make enough money to own an SFR still charge at work during the day, given a charger is provided, while the lowly rest are relegated to the far-too-few charging station spattered about strip mall parking lots.
      If CA is not adequately set up to have EVs, then the rest of the nation is far worse off.
      EDIT: I realize my joke username is not doing me any favors lmao!

  • @utharaptortrex
    @utharaptortrex Před 3 měsíci +52

    I recently attended a lecture with a high level Toyota engineer and he asked the students to do a simple thought experiment. On averege a Toyota hybrid will be 15% to 50% more efficient than an equivalent ICE car. Use de 15% for a conservative estimate. Now consider that most Toyota hybrids only use a 1.5kWh battery (non plug ins). An averege EV will have a battery of about 45kWh. So with that battery you could make 30 Toyota hybrids. So what would be more effective in reducing fuel consumption and emissions? To reduce the fuel used by 30 cars in 15% or to remove one ICE car from the road? If you do the math you'll find that 15% reduction in 30 cars is the equivalent of removing 4.5 ICE cars from the road. In other words, it's at least 4.5 times more efficient that making a single EV.

    • @johanvts
      @johanvts Před 3 měsíci

      It's a false dichotomy. There's plenty of lithium, and actually also alternatives like natrium or sodium batteries. Just more excuses to keep milking their cash cow. We need to get to 0 emissions and a 15% reduction just isn't going to get us there.

    • @pine111
      @pine111 Před 3 měsíci +10

      That just sounds like the same PR jargon Toyota spits out all the time to try and rationalize how horribly behind on EVs they are.
      It makes tons of assumptions in favor of Toyota, the assumption that the person coming from an ICE vehicle isn’t coming from a particularly efficient one or even just another hybrid, also waiving the fact that 30 hybrids would need significantly more materials and parts to build overall than just one EV, like engines for 30 cars (because they’re hybrids), etc., it also ignores the simple fact that hybrids still produce a significant amount of direct emissions, and 30 of them would be produced a pretty large amount of direct emissions, full EVs don’t do that, and even if you account for indirect emissions, full EVs are significantly more eco friendly than hybrids when used regularly like any other car.

    • @oatlegOnYt
      @oatlegOnYt Před 2 měsíci +6

      That excuse is based in the false argument that lithium is lacking and/or very pollutant.
      For the scarce argument, I will say that most people doesn't understand how reserves work. Reserves is not the quantity of raw material that exists underground because we don't know how much is that.
      Reserves is a concept around known or estimated deposits that we can exploit under certain extraction technologies. So if your estimations are wrong, or the extraction technologies get better, reserves can go up.
      And they did. If you search for the numbers, lithium reserves are growing despite we extract them faster than ever. So the real quantity we can exploit at the end of EV adoption is unknown. But it's most probable we will be able to electrify as much as we want.
      A clue of that is lithium in sea water. The sea water reserves are some orders of magnitude greater than land deposits and more than enough to electrify everything. It's just sea lithium is considered too expensive to be massive adopted. But if a new extraction technology is invented that allows to reduce that cost, then it won't be any problem.
      Besides that, BEV doesn't need to be fixed in lithium. We are seeing now the upcoming of sodium-ion technology. Now with lower density than lithium, although more than enough for some purposes. It will probably dominate stationary storage in a decade if lithium production doesn't raise fast enough.
      About the second, it uses the fallacy of decontextualization. While it's pollutant, as any mining, the quantity needs to build a EV battery is a minuscule quantity in comparison with the thousands of litters of fossil fuels (that required even greater quantities of oil in the process to create that fuel). While is more pollutant per unit of material, it's a lot less overall. Besides, batteries are starting to being recycled, and recycled lithium has a lot less environmental impact, so in the end, the impact gets lower and lower across time. Not something that ICE cars will ever do.

    • @laserdrill2023
      @laserdrill2023 Před 29 dny +2

      The best way to reduce emissions is less car on the road.
      Such as Uber, car share, and public transportation.

    • @robertsheperd502
      @robertsheperd502 Před 28 dny

      The battery argument is a false premise. CATL is operating at 50% of capacity.

  • @adam-k
    @adam-k Před 3 měsíci +3

    Pioneers rarely last. The Wright Company is not the largest airplane manufacturer today just because they invented airplanes. Waiting until the product gets popular, the quirks and legislations ironed out, the world is saturated with charging stations etc might be the right move.

  • @joshuadoliveiro
    @joshuadoliveiro Před 2 měsíci +3

    can I also say that the current state of EVs are not designed for the reduction of environmental impact, they are designed to meet regulations and sales targets. Toyota is not evil, they're just realistic about what the market is ready for and when.

  • @AlessandroLosi
    @AlessandroLosi Před 27 dny +2

    I'm from Italy, and here the Toyota mindset is working a lot. We don't have a lot of charging stations and most of the people does not want to give up on the convienience of the gas engine. In fact the Toyota Yaris Hybrid (which i don't think exists in the USA) is one of the most sold cars here, and I would say that is one of the most reasonable hybrid to buy (small, relatively cheap, low fuel consumption, great advantages like free entry in city centers)

  • @deivclayton
    @deivclayton Před 4 měsíci +69

    Plug-in hybrids are a great in-between step. Pure EV's still have the major disadvantage of needing longer times to charge while traveling on road trips.

    • @hojnikb
      @hojnikb Před 3 měsíci +6

      Yeah, they are great at nothing and terrible at many things. There's a reason why inbetween steps in life in general don't work out.
      It's really just a way to manufacturers to skir arount the fleet emissions.

    • @ahwai82
      @ahwai82 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Hybrid is sorta like a solution to high fuel prices but to maintain an engine plus a battery that will degrade how is this the solution for now. I rather have a engine or a ev not a hybrid.

    • @billant2
      @billant2 Před 3 měsíci +2

      The biggest disadvantage is that they cost almost double than regular cars. I don't care if it runs on gas, water, or cow fart, just make them cheaper than current gas cars. All I need is something to get me from point A to B cheaply and refuel quickly, don't need any of the self driving camera whistles and bells. And why not? Electric motors and the rest of the mechanics is much less complicated than gas cars. They are literally charging more for something less convenient to refuel especially for those who don't live in house with overnight charging. smh

    • @twosteptothatyo
      @twosteptothatyo Před 3 měsíci

      Teslas can charge from 0% to 80% in ~20 minutes at a Supercharger. Same amount of time it takes to wait in line at Costco to fuel up.

    • @billant2
      @billant2 Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@@twosteptothatyo- I find it silly how they always say charging an EV from 20 to 80% takes 20 minutes. But charging it to 100% takes 45 minutes. I don't know about you, but always I refuel my car to 100% in under 5 minutes, 80% would take about 3 minutes. lol

  • @yggdrasil9039
    @yggdrasil9039 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Toyota is not betting on hybrids. Toyota is betting on ICE, predominantly. Only 30% of its sales are hybrid. Toyota is really still an ICE manufacturer.
    For instance, the waiting list for the Rav4 hybrid in Australia is currently 2 years. They are just not interested in selling hybrids, or making them in any significant number.

    • @zxb995511
      @zxb995511 Před 3 měsíci +2

      They make million of them, they are just in extremely high demand. Toyota is interested in selling anything that could make them money.

    • @sartonnis
      @sartonnis Před 3 měsíci +2

      I don't see how someone could say Toyota isn't interested in or betting on hybrids when more and more of their models are either now hybrid-only or have hybrid options. The next gen Camry is exclusively hybrid, alongside the Sienna and previously the Venza (which itself is being replaced with the Crown Signia, another hybrid exclusive). The entire upcoming Crown series is either hybrid or PHEV only. Corolla has a hybrid model. The new Land Cruiser is hybrid-only. Hell, even their pickup trucks all have hybrid powertrains as of this year.
      Odds are the next gen Corolla and RAV4 are gonna follow the Camry and become hybrid only as well.

    • @yggdrasil9039
      @yggdrasil9039 Před 3 měsíci

      @@sartonnis I hope so. I think Toyota hybrids are great. But in Australia there is a 2 year waiting list for some models (Rav4 and Camry) and they won't bring PHEVs here under the lame excuse that Australians don't like plugging things in. If you go to a Toyota dealership here they will fall over backwards trying to sell you a pure ICE rather than a HEV.

    • @nadie8093
      @nadie8093 Před 3 měsíci

      30% out of 10 million is huge.

    • @yo2trader539
      @yo2trader539 Před měsícem

      Firstly, Toyota is the company that developed hybrids in the 1990s. It's took 10 years for Toyota to make money on hybrids, but they continued to sell money-losing cars in Japan because they strongly believed in the hybrid technology. So it's not that Toyota or dealerships don't want to sell hybrids. They simply couldn't manufacture enough of them to meet the high global demand. In case you don't know, there were severe supply constraints during the pandemic, especially with semiconductors. Automakers had to cut back due to component production due to shortages, but media reports say that component supply situation has stabilized by end of 2023.

  • @perroaventura
    @perroaventura Před 3 měsíci +36

    It seems to me that Toyota is playing a double game: trying to delay the full electrification of mobility and, at the same time, conveying the message that they are technological leaders and that they are very concerned about the environment. They want to take advantage of either of the two options that settle in the future.

    • @prakhargupta2081
      @prakhargupta2081 Před 3 měsíci +5

      EVs aren't that green and good for environment.

    • @getthecats
      @getthecats Před 3 měsíci +4

      @perroaventura you are making the assumption in your argument that to be technological leaders they must be promoting ev's with full backing. Highly subjective, and I'd say that you are wrong.
      As stated in the video there's not enough chargers yet and MOST customers don't want an EV. So Toyota are making hybrids available to the MOST people and are substituting full ICE cars with hybrids. Toyota is being very utilitarian. It's way easier to convert people from full ICE to hybrid and they can do it in way higher numbers than converting people from full ICE to ev

    • @FrVitoBe
      @FrVitoBe Před 3 měsíci +4

      They playing games only for there own profit and nothing else

    • @getthecats
      @getthecats Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@FrVitoBe they're a business not a charity. I disagree because of the wide range of hybrids they're making

    • @Kni0002
      @Kni0002 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Toyota makes cars you can fix or a small business mechanic can fix. Teslas are impossible to fix. so much for being green, it’s being wasteful.

  • @mollytherealdeal
    @mollytherealdeal Před 4 měsíci +36

    Environmentalist I talk to do not like EVs; they prefer walkable communities so people do not even need cars. Also, many young people I know are not buying any carl; they purchase electric bicycles and electric scooters instead. Also, not all people commute to work, some work online which reduces a need for a car and the need to live in the car dependent suburbs.

    • @broed731
      @broed731 Před 3 měsíci +2

      agreed, walkable communities' and good trains are the future of green. EVs are just a bullshit tech bro fad that just make your pollution emit at a power plant rather than the backside of a car. Not to mention all the rare metals needed for batteries using slave labor and producing a ton of toxic waste byproduct in Africa.

    • @billant2
      @billant2 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Ya good luck biking in a storm, rain, snow, ice, freezing cold, or unbearable heat/humidity. Oh and go grocery shopping with 10 full bags, or take home a large TV from Best Buy, drop off and pick up the kids from school. All that must be really fun on an electric bike. lol Come on man, get real.

    • @Vaasref
      @Vaasref Před 3 měsíci +9

      ​@@billant2 That's kind of the point of walkable communities. You don't need to drop or pick up the kids they have legs too so they can walk from and to school alongside you and when they are old enough they can do it alone instead of forcing you to drive them to their activities or buy a car for a most accident prone teenager.
      Instead of buying in bulk thinking the price is so much better but forgetting the price of owning an depending on a car, you take quick detours on your walk back home to buy a bag or two of supplies when you need it and save up by not having to own a car to do literally everything outside your house.
      As for big items, well I'm guessing you are not buying TVs every other week, in any case if you do then you environmental of your car is probably piss all compared to the over consumption. But yeah, when you big a big TV, you have it delivered I mean the thing is going to cost 3 to 4 figures anyway, why risk to break it by doing the transport yourself ?
      Not needing and thus using any car is always better if possible but when not possible EV have their place and the more car dependent someone is the bigger the environmental improvement is to switch to an EV.

    • @billant2
      @billant2 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@@Vaasref- Ya, that may work in an utopian world but not the real one.

    • @Vaasref
      @Vaasref Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@billant2 That's no utopia. You can live without a car in most European cities to even modest towns if your work is reachable by transit.
      The only difference between Europe and the US is that the US bulldozed their downtown to make parking lots and highways and outlawed most development that allowed density.
      But laws can change even more when they are local zoning and the same way a downtown can be bulldozed, it can also be rebuilt.

  • @gregvanpaassen
    @gregvanpaassen Před 4 měsíci +12

    It would be interesting to know in detail what big fleet buyers think about EVs now. For example rental companies.

    • @Xander1Sheridan
      @Xander1Sheridan Před 4 měsíci +10

      well Hertz is having issues renting Telsas, to the point they basically only rent them to people that use them for ride share.

    • @csilver9625
      @csilver9625 Před 4 měsíci +11

      Rental companies are struggling with EVs. They are renting them out without much EV experience from the employees or the customers.
      Even though I personally will never go back to a combustion engine vehicle. Rental fleets with EV’s face an uphill battle. One of the biggest benefits of an electric car is to be able to fuel up every night while you’re asleep at your home. When you’re in a rental, you’re probably not staying anywhere where you can “fuel up” while you’re asleep.

    • @jamesvandamme7786
      @jamesvandamme7786 Před 4 měsíci

      I bought my car from Hertz and had a good experience. I've been shopping for a Bolt from Hertz, but they want $30K for a 2 year old with 40K miles. There's very few, and of course they're all ugly colors (white, black).
      I've also heard stories about Hertz never charges them so you drive off and have to find a charger in a strange town. And the Teslas, people want to see how much zip they got, so of course the tire and repair expense is killing them.
      Delivery services are going crazy for EVs because the maintenance costs are so much lower. The USPS should have had EVs years ago. They stop at every mailbox and they'd save a LOT of money on fuel, brakes, etc. Unfortunately they're buying them from a crooked company.

    • @jlrguy2702
      @jlrguy2702 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I think you have your answer now, Hertz are selling them all and going back to Gas cars.
      Electric cars are great when you buy one and look after it, but who knows what you are getting with a second-hand one and when they go wrong they cost a packet to fix.

    • @wisenber
      @wisenber Před 3 měsíci

      "For example rental companies."
      Hertz is reducing their EV inventory by 22k this year and replacing them with hybrids.

  • @boxingtherapy87
    @boxingtherapy87 Před 3 měsíci +9

    I was interested a few years ago about EVs. But now I am definitely more toward a hybrid

    • @trucksanddirt1506
      @trucksanddirt1506 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I was also interested, but I'm keeping my gas car for many more years.

    • @JonathanRose24
      @JonathanRose24 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Why? I have an EV, it’s awesome. I can’t imagine ever going back to a gas powered car again

    • @boxingtherapy87
      @boxingtherapy87 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @JonathanRose24 Well, affordability is a issue. At least for me. It's a investment I'm not ready to throw down on just yet

    • @JonathanRose24
      @JonathanRose24 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@boxingtherapy87 EVs have come down in price considerably, but if it’s a budget issue, that I can understand and can respect that. Gotta do what’s right for you.

    • @JonathanRose24
      @JonathanRose24 Před 3 měsíci

      @@trucksanddirt1506 dangerous? How so?

  • @4AMO4
    @4AMO4 Před 7 dny +1

    Bro ain't no way these people eyes are this closed. Behind the curve? Nah, they're just that far ahead.

  • @technicolordiode9891
    @technicolordiode9891 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Great to see Cleveland here, but as a Cleveland born resident, I really see Cleveland moving for EVs in mostly affluent suburbs. Places like Mayfield Heights and Shaker Heights have taken likings to Rivians and Teslas, the Ford dealership that said EVs aren’t moving are probably talking about the lack of Ford EVs seen on Ohio roads at the given moment. Good video regardless though, and appreciate the 216 rep!

  • @ruzzelladrian907
    @ruzzelladrian907 Před 4 měsíci +23

    Maybe Toyota is waiting for CATL’s high density batteries. CATL’s latest battery technology can give a car a range of 800km, (500 miles). It was recently put into the Xiaomi SU7. Though I suspect Toyota is still holding off until they’re sure about the reliability of the batteries.

    • @TheAtqthe30th
      @TheAtqthe30th Před 4 měsíci +4

      Yeah I'm curious with solid state batteries. To be honest I'd trade some range for longer lifespan of the batteries and less likely to burst into flames if damaged.

    • @kornkernel2232
      @kornkernel2232 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Considering they care about reliability reputation, they are very likely waiting for really reliable battery tech that last and has better range. Now we have that, Toyota will wait and do its own research and see if this is a time.

    • @tails300
      @tails300 Před 3 měsíci +3

      They’re building their own battery plant in the US as joint venture with Panasonic I don’t think they’ll be using very CATL packs in their cars.

    • @rkan2
      @rkan2 Před 3 měsíci

      No automaker is going to succeed without their own battery and cell production, especially if they are just going to be buying from the Chinese. Chinese automakers will always be undercutting their price.
      That is why BYD and Tesla are in the lead. Tesla uses batteries from basically everyone.. Cells they make themselves with license from LG, LG manufactured cells, CATL cells, BYD batteries. Also Samsung is on the horizon. They are only missing some of the more obscure and lower production cells made in Europe.

    • @NelsonNyairo
      @NelsonNyairo Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@kornkernel2232This is how Toyota will fall. If you wait for the market to mature without being at the forefront of R&D, building up the ev supply chain, You won't have skin in the game for ev tech. Therefore the time is now...

  • @Steve_in_NJ
    @Steve_in_NJ Před 4 měsíci +6

    Went car shopping today. Well, sort of. I took my 2022 Hyundai Kona to the dealership for it's routine oil and filter change. While waiting, I sat inside a 2024 Kona top model and even though it's "space age", the 1.6 Liter Turbo engine (what I drive now) will *only* get 26 mpg combined. Meanwhile, I am also seriously looking at a 2024 Toyota Corolla Cross HYBRID XSE for next year and for the same price (approximately, depends of whether the dealership does dealer markups and how much), a Toyota Crossover hybrid will get 42-48 mpg!!! Something to consider as I am not ready for full-on EV for just those reasons you mentioned in the video (price, price, price). The price of a new EV, the price of having a charger installed at my home (solar roof panels, green charging energy), and the price of the increased automobile insurance.

    • @Steve_in_NJ
      @Steve_in_NJ Před 4 měsíci +2

      Oh, and the OTHER reason why Toyota isn't going fully electric? They are developing Solid State batteries to replace Lithium-Ion so that's a better technology once it's available.

    • @chrisdeguzman7795
      @chrisdeguzman7795 Před 4 měsíci

      @@Steve_in_NJi heard that as well, thats a game changer…

    • @itisabird
      @itisabird Před 4 měsíci

      Solar panels are not a requirement for having an electric vehicule in the same way as you don't need an oil well in your garden to have a petrol car. You can charge your car with energy from your utility company.

    • @jamesvandamme7786
      @jamesvandamme7786 Před 4 měsíci

      Would you buy a $25K EV?

    • @linusa2996
      @linusa2996 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@itisabird Per Elon Musk, the electrical generation has to double to just meet the electrical demand for an EV economy.
      Hint, the US is not going to be able to double it's power generation for decades.

  • @yetufekci1
    @yetufekci1 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I drive an EV in the UK. It is sometimes frustrating on the long journeys. Especially difficult if you don't have a driveway. It is not for everyone for sure.

  • @dulio12385
    @dulio12385 Před 4 měsíci +118

    Toyota is playing it smart; Let everyone take all the brand damage of introducing and working out the kinks of new tech while taking notes, then step in with a perfect design and an intact reputation.

    • @bobby350z
      @bobby350z Před 4 měsíci +9

      I hope you are right. But by then most people who want to move to EVs will have already done by buying Teslas and other EVs.

    • @gibbonsdp
      @gibbonsdp Před 4 měsíci +19

      You can't just "step into" EV technology, as every other traditional car maker is discovering.

    • @bobby350z
      @bobby350z Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@gibbonsdp - Mainly due to no charging network. And every mfg is trying to charge quite a bit more money for an EV car/truck.

    • @dark6c159
      @dark6c159 Před 4 měsíci +5

      its no like toyota was right. just everyone else went crazy over EVs.
      unreasonable expectation have to face the reality sooner or later .

    • @christophers707
      @christophers707 Před 4 měsíci +11

      ​@@bobby350z EV growth is slowing Toyota made the logical decision plus none of the EV's compare to hybrids when it comes to reliability. When Toyota releases an EV lots of people will buy because they trust the brand which other car companies wish they had.

  • @journeysend1754
    @journeysend1754 Před 4 měsíci +52

    I love how one of the pioneers in ecofriendly vehicles is looking at making tech better in the long term for something we still heavily depend on, Batteries in there current state are emitting greenhouse gases as they are being produced and a lot of the elements are mined in very slavery rich areas, the whole point of moving away from gas is to lower emission to help the environment not just to take away gas reliance ( now that's how it was marketed to the people) we still need to work on EV Tech down the pipeline because we have no large scale battery recycling while all the elements excluding lithium are rare earth metals and lithium is very reactive

    • @linusa2996
      @linusa2996 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@stickynorth only because you are a cultist.
      Fact, gasoline, despite it's inefficiency still creates 50x more watts per lb than the most efficient battery used on cars.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci +2

      Wrong lithium is available on Earth. The largest world reserve was founf in the US. Lithium is 1005 recycled, so very soon there will be no need to mine it, since newer generation of batteries used less lithium.. What amount of green house gases are make drilling petroleum , refining it, burning some portion as gasoline. I will give an idea. From drilling to exhaust the efficiency is only 20% the rest is wasted. They burn residual cuts of the petroleum barrel to produce heat for the gasoline reformers, to produce steam, and lots of electricity to power all the pumps, and controls. It has been proven many times that the ICE is a lot worse. Iron, aluminum are put into furnaces powered by carbon in order to purify the metals to later built the parts.(same for gas, diesel , and ev) More greenhouse gases are generated by car tires.

    • @TeslaRoadtrips
      @TeslaRoadtrips Před 4 měsíci +5

      lol. if you open up with slavery. already lost me, most EVs made now use LFP chemistry don't even use cobalt, manganese, etc

    • @linusa2996
      @linusa2996 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @EnriqueThiele it could be recycled, but thus far only 5% is being recycled

    • @jamesvandamme7786
      @jamesvandamme7786 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@linusa2996 Vapes or phones don't get recycled, but a 500 pound car battery you can get money back for. Just like lead acid gets recycled near 100%.

  • @ferfromla
    @ferfromla Před 4 měsíci +74

    It looks to me like Toyota is going to continue to make truckloads of money by managing the transition from ICE cars to EVs. They know that EVs are the future, but as we are not there yet they can put off the shift for later. Given the high price of EVs in the US, Toyota can offer cars that people love and know without anxiety about range and cost. Since there are few really affordable EVs, hybrids become an easy choice. Because Toyota has considerable experience with hybrids, they are no stranger to electric vehicles, and when the market is right for them they should be able to deliver a quality vehicle at a good price. In the meantime, Tesla will continue to dominate the higher end of the EV market and continue to grab market share from the big three in the US. Nonetheless, there remains a real opportunity to sell more affordable EVs and that is where Toyota could profit handsomely. If they can time it right, offering affordable electrics would be a great strategy. As the charging infrastructure improves and battery prices decrease, EVs will be viable for the broader car-buying public. For the time being it does not appear that Tesla or the Chinese will be a factor at the low end and that is where Toyota can make its mark. If Toyota can't do it someone else will rise to the opportunity and fill that gap.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci +3

      Toyota will soon find that they have no time to convert any factory to ev production. It cost GM $4 billions to change just one plant. As time passes the technology advances more. EV sales keept growing at an exponential rate. In just 4 years (2024) ICE car sales will be less than 50%. Those whose production is less than 50% will be left aside. The China ev makers will took their place since their offerings are 100% ev (like Tesla). VW second world largest manufacturer is in economic trouble just now.
      Tesla will release an economic car of around $25 K that will sell like hotcakes by the end of 2024. Will start manufacturing at Giga Texas, with later installing similar lines at Giga Germany, Giga Shanhai, and when thre Giga Mexico is finished it will excusively make that model for Latin America. BYD sells good electric cars for about 1/2 the price of a Tesla. It is Tesla that will take sales from BYD.

    • @wyw201
      @wyw201 Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@EnriqueThiele Are you predicting this year, ICE car sales will be 50% globally?

    • @binskee677
      @binskee677 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@EnriqueThiele i think you are massivly underestimating Toyota. They are still the most profitable and biggest car company with the best reliability by far, and Toyota is after Tesla the most valuable car brand in the world. Toyota has a huge soft power around the world, even if they are late to the party, just the Toyota logo on a car will sell them. It's not just EV's, in general Toyotas and Lexus are always a step behind their competition when it comes to new tech and features but still they are selling a lot of car, even in Europe where the Germans dominate and you also have french cars in the mix. Even Lexus is outselling their German competition in the US and many other markets. Once battery technology improves, they will jump in and people will buy it. If they can pull off the solid state batteries it's game over anyway for low cost ev's as Toyotas will dominte the market. Toyota won't be the giant they are now in the future anyway, they will loose market share to the chinese no matter how much and how early they are going to invest into EV's. The good thing about EV's are that the tech is very scalable, if you develope one drivetrain, you can scale it to any model in your whole range. Toyota is the most innovative company in the world when it comes to production facilities, even Porsche uses TPS, it won't be much of a struggle to change them as Toyota doesn't produce on assembly lines rather they produce within a Kanban system, making an EV wont be much different for them than maken a new model, especially due to their hybrid expertise they already have decades of knowledge with battery tech and electric engines, that just has to be scaled up.

    • @Aka.Aka.
      @Aka.Aka. Před 3 měsíci +2

      Chinese EVs will win tbh like it's literally a fact

    • @HermanWillems
      @HermanWillems Před 3 měsíci +3

      Their EV's are also UTTERLY shit. Bz4X is total shit. Its a good car, just a bad EV.

  • @jessemeyer3052
    @jessemeyer3052 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Lack of charging stations is a very real concern for many.
    If one has a home, a BEV is far more convenient, since it only takes a few seconds to plug in each night.
    If one is an apartment dweller, a gas or hybrid car is frequently more convenient.

    • @jamessmyth5949
      @jamessmyth5949 Před 3 měsíci +1

      It's not just the lack of charging stations that concerns me with EVs. It's the astronomical cost of a replacement battery, if you can even get one when the time arises, fudging of the figures when it comes to actual driving range, the cost of more expensive tires and more frequent tire replacements, the higher insurance costs, faster depreciation, lack of repair shops that deal with body repairs on EVs, the length of time you wait for a repair due to lack of parts availablity. There's just too many negatives.

  • @artfuldodger5933
    @artfuldodger5933 Před 3 měsíci

    Great video, earned my subscription. One note: I hoped for a more robust discussion of Toyota's critical minerals concerns. I watched the linked video, which is interesting, but it's about lithium alone. What about the other, rarer critical minerals? Another video topic? These issues will be more and more salient as the energy transition era continues.

  • @sedawk
    @sedawk Před 3 měsíci +3

    At 0:22 you missed Tesla. Didn’t even acknowledge it was removed from the data set!

  • @alanyoung159
    @alanyoung159 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I want a BEV, but it's still too pricey, among other things to work through.

  • @AmericanRoads
    @AmericanRoads Před 3 měsíci +2

    I live in an apartment and have no capability of charging at home. If I drive an EV, my only option is to charge at charging stations, and they are getting just as expensive as refueling a gasoline car. For people like me, hybrids are actually more economical to run than EVs. I am glad for the variety of RELIABLE hybrids that Toyota is currently offering. I currently own a 2022 Corolla LE hybrid and a 2023 RAV4 XSE hybrid.

  • @philmarsh7723
    @philmarsh7723 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I want a plug in hybrid which has no transmission and where the engine only operates a generator to keep batteries charged and provide power and heat. Why are they still putting transmissions in hybrids???

    • @yumameda
      @yumameda Před 2 měsíci

      Because the tiny electric motor they put in those cars are not enough to power the car. They only work low speeds for a short distance.

    • @stephenberry8658
      @stephenberry8658 Před 21 dnem

      Nissan X Trail E Force Electric drive with ICE generator or Mitsubishi Outlander plug in hybrid with EV drive train

  • @zdzislawmeglicki2262
    @zdzislawmeglicki2262 Před 4 měsíci +18

    The problem with those oh so proudly exhibited EVs is that … nobody wants them. The lots are full of unsold EVs so much so the companies are forced to shut down production and accept horrendous losses on EVs sold, while the dealers openly refuse to carry the vehicles and to pay for the exorbitantly expensive infrastructure and expertise needed to support them.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci +3

      No close to 14M ev were sold during 2023 (up from 10M during 2022) The world market is 70M cars. At thet rate 50% of the market by ev sales will happen before 2027 starts,

    • @zdzislawmeglicki2262
      @zdzislawmeglicki2262 Před 4 měsíci +6

      @@EnriqueThiele That was a *projection* for 2023. The real number is not known yet and we've seen a slump in sales towards the end of the year. As to further growth of EV demand it is a projection too. As shortcomings of EVs become better understood and strategic materials required to build them less available and more expensive, the supply and demand may well drop. Currently just one country, China, accounts for 60% of global EV sales. But China is hardly your typical automotive market.

    • @YeHtetWin
      @YeHtetWin Před 3 měsíci

      @@EnriqueThiele stop crying

    • @johanvts
      @johanvts Před 3 měsíci +2

      Nobody wants them? Model Y was the best selling car across the world last year.

    • @johanvts
      @johanvts Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@zdzislawmeglicki2262or the number will just grow as battery prices keep dropping and more affordable cars like the ID2 model 2 and E-C3 reach the market. But I think the US might just take a lot longer to switch to evs than the rest of the world.

  • @justinjones6810
    @justinjones6810 Před 4 měsíci +19

    Toyota sees that evs will not be viable for mass market adoption until certain specifications are meet which are consumers being able to charge the battery from 10 to 80 percent in 10 minutes and have 400 miles of range building electric cars before those two things have been achieved is ridiculous once the battery manufactures have cells that can do the charging rate as stated above that is when you push forward with electric cars

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci +3

      Now there are model that charge in 5 minutes, and has a rsnge of about 400 miles. It is manufactured in China as the first offering of XIOMI (a cell phone manufacturer)

    • @kornkernel2232
      @kornkernel2232 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​​@@EnriqueThieleYep, and thats the tech is where goldilocks zone for EVs. Probably Toyota knew about this and will make one based on new tech. Now that just need to have the cost done and truly reliable. Still too new and not yet well proven
      Toyota is kinda conservative company, except they occassionally experiment. But for the most part they want that something that last since its their own reputation is in line here and wanted to keep that. Its not like ICE vehicles is completely banned in all countries, it will be a long transition still. Thats why they want to sell more Hybrids instead for now.

    • @YeHtetWin
      @YeHtetWin Před 3 měsíci

      @@EnriqueThiele stop crying

    • @billant2
      @billant2 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Why not charge from 10 to 100%? I don't refill my gas tank to only 80%, but always full. They might as well say charging from 10% to 100% in 30 minutes. lol

    • @bradhaines3142
      @bradhaines3142 Před 3 měsíci +3

      the thing is even with those abilities, that battery is easily 1000-3000 pounds by itself. battery tech needs to move so far before the car itself is viable, and more importantly the grid needs 30 years worth of upgrades before it can handle them. most people dont realize an ev pulls more power than a whole house with a single charge, and most places the grid is almost maxed out in summer/winter.

  • @tokyo-wt7fq
    @tokyo-wt7fq Před 3 měsíci +2

    Note that Japan has many natural hazard like earthquake and heavy snow.
    EV would be useless in crisis situation

  • @mikhilmuhuthan6903
    @mikhilmuhuthan6903 Před 2 měsíci +1

    As a car enthusiast, I respect toyota for not going full ev like other car manufacters. They stay grounded and watch as the others fly too close to the tesla sun and melt thier wings and plunge into the ocean, helplessly swimming back to the shore or drowning and sinking into the cold, dark, deep ocean.

  • @ShaunRF
    @ShaunRF Před 3 měsíci +13

    A little surprised you made no mention of Toyota's hydrogen fuel cell investments, which they are desperately clinging to due to their enormous sunk costs in the doomed technology.

    • @rkan2
      @rkan2 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Waiting for the day when a hydrogen fuel cell doesn't require palladium, doesn't cost the car's msrp's worth to replace and of course when hydrogen production is 90% efficient 😂

    • @yo2trader539
      @yo2trader539 Před 27 dny

      Hydrogen-fueled buses using Toyota technology is already running in Japan for years. Now, hydrogen-fueled trains with Toyota technology are being tested by JR East. The project name is "Hybari."

    • @evancombs5159
      @evancombs5159 Před 26 dny

      Hydrogen fuel cells make sense, just not for cars. Their investment will pay off, just you won't notice it as a consumer because you won't be using it directly.

  • @michaelqu
    @michaelqu Před 3 měsíci +58

    Toyota understands most don't want or can't afford an EV and that the charging infrastructure is inadequate

    • @totalstrangerthing7419
      @totalstrangerthing7419 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Tell that to Chinese who sell their cars for around 10K$. That's right 10000$. Not 1 Million, not 100 thousand but 10 thousand. And monthly cost of recharging the around 100$ MONTHLY.

    • @mostlyguesses8385
      @mostlyguesses8385 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@totalstrangerthing7419... The cost of gasoline is around only $100 monthly in US. Gasoline is darn cheap, EV promoters act like it's $10,000.... that's the problem, gas is cheap. """""When we divide 2015's consumption of 140.43 billion gallons across those roughly 214 million licensed drivers, it adds up to 656 gallons per driver. At an average price of $2.15 per gallon last year, the average American forked about $1,400 just to fill up their tank."""""

    • @totalstrangerthing7419
      @totalstrangerthing7419 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@mostlyguesses8385 that's in us. I m from Bosnia. Here thx to war in Ukraine U started, cost of gas 2x than US, give or take where u live. My brother bought EV last year & he is so pleased that he said he'll never go back to gas. Now my father is thinking to also buy one.

    • @yulusleonard985
      @yulusleonard985 Před 3 měsíci

      @@mostlyguesses8385 Thats the privilege living in US where your government have no problem bombing other nations for oil just to keep you happy. People who scream "EV are scam" almost all of them are American.

    • @babananabanana9163
      @babananabanana9163 Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@@totalstrangerthing7419 But Bosnia is pretty small ? No ? I dont know your country really well, so i just assuming its size from how it looks at google.
      Sure Wuling BYD etc are pumping cheap EV, But the problem is.... is it sustainable ? Those cheapo EV are taking the resources that are rare and making it expendable commodity.
      And you know that raw material are finite. Of course we can always recycle those battery material, however.... those recycle mineral gonna degrade and arent gonna be comparable to a freshly mined mineral. And that is the dilema of EV. It looks good on short term, it sounds promising, and it looks like a cheaper alternative. but it is SHIT !

  • @pocok5000
    @pocok5000 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Toyota's general strategy is that they let the other manufacturers figure out what the market wants, and then they do it better than anyone else

  • @B11O567
    @B11O567 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I wonder how second-hand EVs and their trade-in values are going to affect brand reputation. If your cars are undriveable after 10-15 years that’s going to put a pretty big damper on your reputation.

  • @vadskar64
    @vadskar64 Před 3 měsíci +6

    One should be in Midwest this week to see why EVs are not ready for the prime time.

  • @anvilsvs
    @anvilsvs Před 4 měsíci +11

    I'm not a Toyota fan boy. Didn't much like the early Prii (too slow, etc.) but they've got it right on this.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci

      It is a big improvement from the prius previous generation. It can not save Toyota from what will happen in just 2 years.

    • @ali_adeeb
      @ali_adeeb Před 4 měsíci +3

      Toyota will be fine. I see all manufacturers struggling selling their EVs from Ford to GMC. Plus the reliability is garbage especially in colder climates. I think an extremely efficient hybrid is the solution, and can help us get to a stable eco-friendly equilibrium of carbon emissions given we change the rest of the energy production system to net carbon zero like Nuclear etc. @@EnriqueThiele

  • @yamanjain
    @yamanjain Před 3 měsíci +1

    USA has bad public transport so people depend on cars for inter City travel.
    In India my area has better trains than roads (which are improving) so we almost never go inter City by car anyway. EVs make perfect sense for us.

  • @mynamehere69
    @mynamehere69 Před měsícem

    This was how it was when I got my Hybrid Rav 4 in 2020, the dealership said that Toyota wasn’t seeing great profit from it and wanted to focus on Hybrid since it was supposed to be the best of both worlds

  • @jerom_jomon
    @jerom_jomon Před 3 měsíci +36

    Toyota was never the leader of innovation. So it makes sense to take it slow but reliable approach. That reliability reputation is worth a lot to upkeep

    • @HermanWillems
      @HermanWillems Před 3 měsíci

      Reliable? 80 People in USA got killed by very very bad quality software in their ECU's and also other parts of the car failing because of that. Even NASA had to get the code from Toyota and concluded it's super shit code.

    • @elisee9935
      @elisee9935 Před 3 měsíci +4

      When they made the Prius, that was leading in innovation. The difference however between Toyota Innovation and other brands' innovation is that Toyota will only release things that are ready for mass consumption. If they can't sell it everywhere in the world, they won't make it. They can't sell electric cars in Africa or Australia, so they're holding off until their battery technology is ready.

    • @HermanWillems
      @HermanWillems Před 3 měsíci +1

      @elisee9935 Tesla is ready for mass production. Tesla Model Y is best selling car in the world.

    • @elisee9935
      @elisee9935 Před 3 měsíci

      @@HermanWillems being ready for mass production is different from being ready for mass consumption/adoptation. All big carmakers can mass produce EV's if they want to, but if not all people can buy them, it 's not ready for mass adoptation.

    • @joaquimbarbosa896
      @joaquimbarbosa896 Před 3 měsíci

      Their evs are not reliable, and they are not developing any super amszing tech, instead they are far behind
      Its impressive that they've been saying the same bs for years and people still buy it

  • @leeswecho
    @leeswecho Před 2 měsíci +1

    there's an important piece of information that makes all of these actions more understandable: there's only two companies that currently can build an EV for less than what they can sell it for -- Tesla and BYD.
    And its not even close. I've heard of negative margins on the level of the selling price of the car (i.e. costing almost double what its being sold for). For the moment, every other company is "faking it til they make it" and hoping they can figure it out before they bleed to death. It's why GM ended the Bolt (and hoping to reintroduce it on its hopefully-profitable Ultium technology platform).

  • @moatplay
    @moatplay Před 2 měsíci +1

    How I see it Toyota went all in on hybrids. They are the only company to have most of their line up available as a hybrid including their Lexus brand. Building cars is hard and it’s difficult developing brand new automotive technologies. As an example, any company that can build a successful nuclear power car will have the exact same problems EV makers are having today.

  • @LittleSpot
    @LittleSpot Před 3 měsíci +5

    You forgot big oils money. So many million dollars were spent to fight against the logical cheaper BEVs. To avoid charger installing programs in different areas. And another factor is the LFP patent. A base LFP battery patent was not active in china, but in the rest of the world. It ended in 2022 after 20 years. So productiong and selling LFP batterys globally is now cheaper. In China and Europe, the change to BEV is not longer stoppable. Because we don't want to be dependend on oil imports.

    • @jxmai7687
      @jxmai7687 Před 3 měsíci

      Without import tax Chinese will only purchase local EVs with much lower price, all Japan and Koren car brands is dropping out.

  • @R0Tl
    @R0Tl Před 3 měsíci +6

    At 6:41 Toyota didn't say the material in 6 BEVs could make 90 hybrids. As it says right there on the image that you showed, they can use the material in one BEV to make 6 PHEVs or to make 90 regular HEVs.

    • @samin90
      @samin90 Před 3 měsíci +1

      And yet they don't many anywhere near enough. My local Toyota dealership has 5 cars on the lot, not hybrids, just cars. Meanwhile the Model Y is the best selling car in the world
      Clearly the raw materials aren't the problem

    • @costis1979
      @costis1979 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@samin90 in Europe almost 100% of Toyotas sold are hybrids

    • @ijustfelldown
      @ijustfelldown Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@samin90 if your world only has a few developed parts of some North American and European regions, then Model Y is the best selling car. But it's not at all the best selling car in the whole world.

  • @tedshen1716
    @tedshen1716 Před 3 měsíci +1

    There's still a long way to go for the states. Up to end of 2022 there are 145k public charger built in Shanghai which rounds up to 150 persons per chager

  • @TheWeedOperation
    @TheWeedOperation Před 3 měsíci +1

    Honestly, toyota is right in regards to the resource constraints, and I think that is the crisis most of the car manufacturers that rashed into making EVs have encountered now. They have all flooded the market with incredible demand for minerals and resources leading to the highest commodity prices ever. Whilst at the same time expecting to sell those cars at super low prices to regular economy car consumers. I can bet they've realised things won't add up. Toyota's move to push hybrids in the short term whilst gradually moving to EVs is a masterstroke in business acumen. This will give the mineral industry time to ramp up production in the medium term, and allowing toyota to better commit and deliver EVs to their customers in the long run.

  • @KbB-kz9qp
    @KbB-kz9qp Před 3 měsíci +19

    Folks in Chicago recently had a demonstration of how EVs have some problems in winter weather .
    The thing about cold weather is that it can become life threatening, especially in sparsely populated areas, and so in colder climes, having a reliable car is important.

    • @jamesphillips2285
      @jamesphillips2285 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Strange how the EVs were having trouble in Chicago, but not colder places.
      Through I heard through the local grapevine that 630 CHED in Edmonton complained about EVs not starting ... could not find a copy of the episode. After having rescued my sister's ICE car that would not start at -20c (-4F): I blamed the 12V system. EVs can be boosted just like ICE cars in the extreme cold.

    • @opmacace523
      @opmacace523 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@jamesphillips2285they are having trouble in Norway too you know the range basically gets cut in half in cold winters because you have to use the heater and the battery capacity is lower. They just don’t talk about it to much because it doesn’t fit the agenda

    • @jamesphillips2285
      @jamesphillips2285 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@opmacace523 The agenda of having a livable biosphere?!? THAT agenda?

    • @opmacace523
      @opmacace523 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@jamesphillips2285 just tell me that you don’t know how batteries are made and shut up

    • @jamesphillips2285
      @jamesphillips2285 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@opmacace523 I can also say you obviously don't know how oil mining works.

  • @Alarios711
    @Alarios711 Před 3 měsíci +9

    It's really weird that the video frames the full electric as greener than hybrid when the very document they read mid video seems to indicate otherwise.
    If you commute 12-15 miles to your job, you plug-in hybrid is pretty much going to run only on the battery. So you get an EV, that can do long trips on demand (or has a back-up if you forget to charge it overnight), has has 1/6 of the battery requirement a full EV has. It's like an EV but way less polluting to manufacture due to the smaller battery size.

    • @thomasreese2816
      @thomasreese2816 Před 3 měsíci +2

      That 'material' is Toyota marketing, not research. EVs on a dirty grid are greener than plug-in hybrids. They always win

    • @nicewall8311
      @nicewall8311 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@thomasreese2816 Producing an electric car produces significantly more emissions than an ICE car. Even the greenest electric cars, with small batteries, powered off a 100% clean energy grid take years to break-even. This is common knowledge that even EV enthusiasts are well aware of. Hybrids are absolutely greener in many instances, the reason EV people still push EVs is that rapid improvement of technology will start to widen the gap. But for now, in this instance, EVs are not as green as they may seem at first glance. Toyota is simply waiting for other companies to solve the problems EVs have and jump in later, for good or bad.

    • @Yutani_Crayven
      @Yutani_Crayven Před 3 měsíci

      Research shows that most hybrid owners use the vehicles in the same way as a regular ICE vehicle, meaning, people don't charge it often enough and run it on gas most of the time, negating the environmental benefit of electric motors.

  • @drfisheye
    @drfisheye Před 3 měsíci +1

    2,800 people per charger in California seems low. The Netherlands has 120 people per public charger, or 34 if you include private chargers. Did you mean DC fast chargers?

  • @alex98b627
    @alex98b627 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I don’t understand range anxiety. How often are these people driving more than 300 miles in one trip?! That’s crazy. I’m Australia and we also have a large country traverse but driving for over 6 hours wouldn’t happen very often. I don’t understand hating a car because the trip you make once or twice a year might need a charge part way through.

    • @Globalurb
      @Globalurb Před 3 měsíci

      I used to do that kind of trip at least once a month. There are people doing that kind of trip every week because driving is cheaper than flying and more flexible than taking the train.

    • @alex98b627
      @alex98b627 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Yeah sure, I get it. But that must be such a small percentage of the car buying population. Maybe 5%? Which is why I don’t understand how it’s become such a thing. If it impacts 5% or less of the buyers out there then it shouldn’t be a thing.
      Surely for 95%+ of car buyers a range of even just 100 miles would be totally sufficient for 99.99% of their car trips. So 300 miles is more than plenty.

    • @CheapSushi
      @CheapSushi Před 3 měsíci

      Do you think most Americans in most cities and suburbs fill up their entire gas tank all the time? Many many many many people don't. Many put in $10 or $15 here and there and go on with their day. They'll fully fill up for road trips. Many of us are stuck in stop and go traffic. I can't even cross from one side of Chicago to the other in less than 1 hour. It's not even outside the city limits, just the city itself. There's way more to "range anxiety" than pure A-to-Z straight runs.

    • @alex98b627
      @alex98b627 Před 3 měsíci

      @@CheapSushiI don’t understand the relevance of not filling up your gas tank. I would say that ‘most Americans’ live in single family homes and therefore would have access to plug in the car over night. So the partial pulling up at a gas station is totally irrelevant.
      Also stop start traffic is much better for an electric car with regenerative braking. So your 1 trip across your city is actually better for range than when you travel on the highway out of the city.
      So my point stands - for most of your trips a range of 100 miles would be more than enough. So 300 miles is surely enough over 95% of car buyers and car trips.

    • @alex98b627
      @alex98b627 Před 3 měsíci

      @@CheapSushialso the not filling up thing happens in Australia but really only by students who don’t drive much. Your gas is soooo cheap so I don’t know why you guys are always complaining about it. Australia, Europe, UK has prices 2-4x more expensive.

  • @bobby350z
    @bobby350z Před 4 měsíci +11

    Man I have seen 2 BZ4X in the last one yr in SF bay area. I normally see 20 Teslas in < 1 min on the road here. And that BZ4X isn't cheap either. It costs as much as Model Y. So for me, Toyota has itself to blame.

    • @dickiewongtk
      @dickiewongtk Před 4 měsíci +1

      Blame for what?

    • @codechrist
      @codechrist Před 4 měsíci

      I don’t understand this comment? Blame for what? …Very uneducated and ignorant comment. Please go back and do your homework! Fail!!

    • @bobby350z
      @bobby350z Před 4 měsíci +4

      @@dickiewongtk - Making expensive EV which doesn't compete with the competition.

    • @linusa2996
      @linusa2996 Před 4 měsíci

      @@bobby350z Per Toyota, they can make 6-10 Hybrids for the materials it costs to make 1 EV.
      That's not marketing, that's from the CEO of Toyota.

    • @bobby350z
      @bobby350z Před 4 měsíci

      @@linusa2996 - And you believe the CEO of any company?

  • @Maebbie
    @Maebbie Před 3 měsíci +6

    The video discusses Toyota's strategy in the electric vehicle (EV) market and why the company has been slower to adopt EVs compared to other car manufacturers. Toyota has focused on hybrids and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, citing challenges such as critical minerals, charging infrastructure, and affordability. The video suggests that Toyota may be intentionally "falling behind" on EVs to save its hybrid sales, which make up a significant portion of the market. However, Toyota has announced plans to release more electric cars in the coming years.

  • @peteramstutz
    @peteramstutz Před 3 měsíci +1

    I own two plug-in hybrids, a Pacifica hybrid (minivan) and Prius Prime. The people crapping on plugin-ins as "too complicated" don't know what they are talking about.
    a) electically variable transmissions used in hybrids sre actually mechanically simpler and more reliable than regular automatic transmissions
    b) because the gas engine doesn't run all the time, it has less wear and tear for miles driven. Similarly, regenerative breaks mean the break pads last way longer.
    c) Even though the battery pack adds weight, driving on electric is still 2x-3x efficient as gas (and even when driving on gas, hybrids are 20-30% more efficient becaue the engine uses a different cycle which is possible becaue it has the electric motor is available to help).
    I do think plug-in hybrids are transitional to fully electric but if a fully electric vehicle isn't available or practical, a PHEV lets you decrease your gas usage by 75% _right now_.

  • @johnchristie162
    @johnchristie162 Před 23 dny

    I recall seeing a CZcams item about a 2008 Toyota Camry Hybrid with a failed hybrid battery which cost $6000 US to replace. So the dilemma was do you spend $6K on a 16 year old car. That’s the concern going forward with hybrid vehicles and the same applies to EV’s. The reality is that you pay more for a hybrid when new and the potential dilemma into the future is the depreciation of the vehicle plus the cost of a battery replacement which must impact on the used car values.

  • @thenightoffice2541
    @thenightoffice2541 Před 4 měsíci +8

    I think alot of these automakers should consider making a sub-brand of EV only vehicles with their own dealership network. GM can bring back the Saturn brand and make it all EVs.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci

      True.

    • @SMGSpiritRT
      @SMGSpiritRT Před 4 měsíci +2

      That is a good strategy. Saturn by default sounds futuristic. And Ford could do the same bringing back Mercury and Stellantis the same with Plymouth or Chrysler, or at least save it because they don't know what to do with the brand.

    • @axel3895
      @axel3895 Před 3 měsíci

      People have memory of gold fish. No one remembers Saturn except car people. Brand value is everything today.

    • @YeHtetWin
      @YeHtetWin Před 3 měsíci

      @@EnriqueThielestop crying

  • @addanametocontinue
    @addanametocontinue Před 4 měsíci +6

    Why on Earth would I want to buy an EV when the charging infrastructure isn't there, charging time is still not that great, repairs are, from what I've heard, incredibly expensive, and they generally cost more? Toyota is absolutely right. If I want to cut down on emissions and still get the benefits of a gas car, I would get a hybrid. All the benefits of an ICE and you get even more range and MPG.

  • @qn3734
    @qn3734 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I have a 1998 Toyota Camry and it does the job

  • @noodlechrist4958
    @noodlechrist4958 Před 26 dny +1

    Ah yes, the CEO of Volkswagen. Such integrity.

  • @davisdesigns1153
    @davisdesigns1153 Před 3 měsíci +23

    Toyota has always made sensible choices, this shows the benefit of doing so

    • @hojnikb
      @hojnikb Před 3 měsíci +2

      except when they needlessly poured billions of dollars in to deadend tech like hydrogen.

  • @JeffMathias
    @JeffMathias Před 4 měsíci +6

    People aren’t grasping the effects of carbon credits and diseconomies of scale. Manufacturers unable to produce compelling EVs by 2030 will just go away.

  • @Jagueyes1
    @Jagueyes1 Před měsícem

    There are several recent videos about the Toyota water engine which describes a system of on-board hydrolysis. Have you seen them? What do you make of them?

  • @thersanothersidetome
    @thersanothersidetome Před 12 dny

    I think you misunderstood or misstated Toyota’s statistic. They said materials from 1 EV battery can be used to produce 6 Plug in hybrids, and 90 regular Hybrids.

  • @Kosciejas
    @Kosciejas Před 3 měsíci +25

    Toyota is just going to wait until it becomes mainstream. Keep doing their thing that is clearly working, and let others keep forcing EVs and figuring things out. It’s not like EVs are so green too so i totally understand them.

    • @billant2
      @billant2 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Nothing wrong with that, in the meantime they keep selling less expensive and more desired gas cars. Mind blown!

    • @Kosciejas
      @Kosciejas Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@billant2 exactly my point...

    • @emmanuelgutierrez8616
      @emmanuelgutierrez8616 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Like Polaroid waiting for digital to fade out of style lol

    • @billant2
      @billant2 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@emmanuelgutierrez8616 - No, unlike Polaroid, Toyota knows that 90% of consumers still want reliable, less expensive, and long range cars. When the time comes they'll make plenty of great EV's at affordable prices. We're not there yet, battery technology the power grid needs to be upgraded first.

    • @evancombs5159
      @evancombs5159 Před 26 dny

      @@billant2 something everyone misses about the power grid, they are only going to upgrade it as the demand requires them. There is no benefit to the power companies to have excess capacity. They want to stay just barely ahead of the curve otherwise they risk wasting money managing those additional resources that they otherwise didn't need. The grid is the least of our worries, it will expand as our electrical needs expand, and no faster.

  • @issuesexplained681
    @issuesexplained681 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Toyota has always been careful before making big changes to their vehicles, I think they better understand where the market is really at right now.

  • @russiank9802
    @russiank9802 Před měsícem +1

    When something like 85%+ of American driving is 45 mile or less commutes, a plug in hybrid with ~80-90 miles of range makes infinitely more sense than a full electric with 350.
    On top of all of this, current hydro/solar/wind technology will not be able to hold up to tens of millions of electric cars being dropped onto the grid. In a supposed future where all gas vehicle sales are actually banned (only promised atm) all of that additional electricity will either be generated by environmentally 'dirty' power plants, or we need to be investing billions into nuclear ASAP.
    Realistically California may go through with the ban, but that's only going to create a huge market for importing gas cars from other states.

  • @ankylonshadow
    @ankylonshadow Před měsícem +1

    Until charging is as convenient as fuel stations, I am not going to buy an EV. Even if you could charge at home (not everyone can have a 3 phase fast charger at home), they still can't deal with longer journeys. Not to mention cold weather severely impact battery performance, as a driver I simply don't want to deal with all these stress.

  • @RudolfMaister420
    @RudolfMaister420 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Why is there no mention about how the grid can handle all those electric cars and how much heavier an EV is compared to a regular car, and how much more damage that causes to the roads.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci +1

      Weight difference is not as big as you think. For example the CyberTruck weights less than comparable ICE (gas or diesel) pick up trucks. Cars (SUV) have grown in weight an average of 1,000 pounds during the last ten years The batteries weight more than a motor and transmision but the difference is decreasing with more efficient batteries. The grid cannhandle it because it is operated by private companies willing to sell all the power the customer demands. They will make new renewable plans as needed.

    • @jamesphillips2285
      @jamesphillips2285 Před 3 měsíci

      At least were I live the grid is over-built. It can easily handle EV charging. It is generating capacity that is lacking. EVs, in theory, can pair well with intermittent power sources as well: they are inherently load shedable.
      The Canadian Electrical code has been changed so that you don't even need to upgrade your electrical service to handle L2 charging. You simply need to install a whole house energy monitor that automatically stops charging during peak demand.
      That does not fully address the grid issue: if made proprietary, this will likely interfere with "virtual powerplants" that "smart" hot water tank manufacturers want to sell to grid operators. Hot water tanks are ALSO inherently loadshedable. But if the hot water tank load-sheds through some proprietary protocol: the "whole home energy monitor" mentioned earlier may think it is OK to charge the car during a period of high grid demand.
      Such technologies need to allow the user to override a load shed request as need. But more importantly the standards should not be proprietary! I think the only reason the standards are proprietary is so that the manufacturer, and not the users shedding demand, get paid for not using very expensive power.

  • @Quaerite.Intellectum
    @Quaerite.Intellectum Před 4 měsíci +11

    First of all, EVs are NOT affordable for most people. They're affordable to only the relatively small percentage of people who can actually afford them and all the idiots who constantly have a loan on cars they can't really afford, AKA they spend most of their money paying for a car loan and then complain, "I'm broke!". Ya, that's because you buy shit you can't afford.
    Second, something you did not address in your video and it's VERY important. If everyone is buying EVs, the demand on our power grid is going to sky rocket astronomically. Are we as a country building tons of reliable power plants and other power sources to be prepared for that? As far as I know, that's NOT happening. It's certainly not happening in California. Last summer the governor asked people to not charge their cars for a few days.
    Those two things need to be solved.

    • @coleeto2
      @coleeto2 Před měsícem

      EVs have a lower cost of ownership compared to ICE vehicles. It would be more accurate to say most people can’t afford a brand new car!
      Secondly, if starting today all new car sales were EV, it would take about 20 years for all (well close to all) cars on the road to be EV.
      There are a huge number of renewable energy projects in the works, some are built and waiting on red tape from the grid companies.

    • @Quaerite.Intellectum
      @Quaerite.Intellectum Před měsícem

      @@coleeto2 Test

    • @evancombs5159
      @evancombs5159 Před 26 dny

      California is a special case, don't assume anything that is true in California is true anywhere else. In fact, it is usually the opposite.

  • @abrahamsneo7783
    @abrahamsneo7783 Před 22 dny

    Never seen a single EV here in South Africa.
    We're not ready for that .

  • @daedalusrunner8423
    @daedalusrunner8423 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Actually have reduced more emissions through their hybrids alone than all car manufacturers combined.
    I mean look at the new Prius. It can go 100 on a charge and can operate on gas. It is an amazing hybrid
    If you can make 8 Prius’s vs 1 EV, which one would be better for the environment? Most people would operate the Prius on battery for their average commute

  • @JohnDotBomb
    @JohnDotBomb Před 4 měsíci +10

    My roommate loves his plug in hybrid! He goes through a tank of gas every few months.
    It weighs less than an EV so it's probably more efficient, and it cost less carbon and money to produce.
    I think a 40-60 mile range is great to cover the 90% of driving for much less investment

    • @stickynorth
      @stickynorth Před 4 měsíci

      Oh yeah? What's his name? This smacks of a fake story used by anti EV people... Or worse? AI!

    • @tribalypredisposed
      @tribalypredisposed Před 4 měsíci +2

      Not more efficient than any but the most absurd EVs, like the GM Hummer EV.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Před 4 měsíci

      What model of Toyota does your friend have? Prius Prime or RAV4 Prime?

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci

      But it genrates more carbon every day it is started. The footprint of a hybrid vehicle is way too high compared to an ev.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci

      Yes. That mounstrosity is probably more waste of energy than any ICE car as difficult as that may be. Worse GM is using the same battery pack (that weights more than a small car) in their pickups, and large SUV.@@tribalypredisposed

  • @cammiso94
    @cammiso94 Před 3 měsíci +6

    $60k battery replacement = no way

    • @yulusleonard985
      @yulusleonard985 Před 3 měsíci +2

      isnt that story is all about dealership? The real cost for battery replacement is 12k

    • @jamesphillips2285
      @jamesphillips2285 Před 3 měsíci

      @@yulusleonard985 More than one Canadian Hyundai dealership quoted more than the car is new for a battery replacement.
      With just minor external damage: taking the whole battery apart, inspecting every piece, and then putting it back together again, replacing as many components as necessary: should cost less than even the $12K figure you quote.

    • @yulusleonard985
      @yulusleonard985 Před 3 měsíci

      @@jamesphillips2285 12k is from Sandy Monroe who tear down IONIQ 5 who said the battery is 12k. 60k is from dealership and insurance company who want maximum profit from their customer.

  • @Yayadays111
    @Yayadays111 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Hybrid just makes more sense unless you have a whole infrastructure setup including your own house.
    Even in today market, EV charging can be quite a mess.
    Honestly if people are screaming about environment then tax more for SUVs because those are just less energy and space efficient and not necessary. And sedan is getting squeezed out just because its not trendy anymore

  • @kellymoses8566
    @kellymoses8566 Před měsícem +1

    Plug-in hybrids make the most sense.

  • @n.jigmelhendup5495
    @n.jigmelhendup5495 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Toyota knows something which others manufacturers will only find out a decade later 😂

    • @hojnikb
      @hojnikb Před 3 měsíci

      Yeah, they need to lobby hard against EVs, otherwise they'ill die into obscurity. They missed the EV train 10 years ago, because they focused too much on hydrogen (pointless) and hybrids (stopgap at best).

    • @n.jigmelhendup5495
      @n.jigmelhendup5495 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Making hybrids also means making part electric.what they know is batteries will last 10 years and then what. Buy another new car or buy batteries which cost as much as buying a new car? Toyota is a brand that stands for longevity. Toyota will only build an EV that will last a long time. They will not destroy their brand trying to do what everyone else does. When they know how to then only they will make the jump.

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy Před 3 měsíci

      Even if the claims about batteries is true wouldn’t automakers love it because most companies nowadays like planned obsolescence.
      Japan isn’t in the race for ev’s anymore, Tesla is winning and byd is trying to capture market although for now they only did in Australia,Brazil and a few other , Chinese companies own major car companies in Europe, I think even South Korea is doing better than Japanese brands in ev’s.
      Even if ev’s end up been a fluck they would gain knowledge and maybe even get a breakthrough the way they are doing it they only have the 20+ years it takes to replace the entire ice fleet of cars.
      Oil lobby is strong so maybe they will, we will wait and see

  • @kiefershanks4172
    @kiefershanks4172 Před 4 měsíci +8

    Toyota is positioning itself as the plug-in hybrid leader so they are not going to be phased out of the market by mandates. I think their reasoning to avoid fully electric cars is logical given the resource constraints of producing batteries. Most people only need a small amount of range for the vast majority of their driving. It is wasteful to build BEVs with large, long range batteries. Let's say you have a fleet of 50 cars and you have only enough resources to build 100kWh of batteries. Building one or two BEVs with those batteries would be foolish if your goal is to reduce emissions of the fleet. Sure you've made two cars zero-emission but there's still 48 other cars that must be gas powered. The overall emissions reduction would be small. But take those 100kWh of batteries to make 50 2kWh hybrid batteries and now your entire fleet is more efficient. Sure they still burn gasoline, but hybrids burn significantly less fuel than conventional powertrains, up to a ballpark of 30% less fuel. This would mean your average emissions reduction would be much higher with a 100% hybrid fleet than a fleet with 1-2 BEVs and 48 conventional vehicles. Just saying. Unlike the tech bros at Tesla, the engineers at Toyota have actually done some math.

    • @EnriqueThiele
      @EnriqueThiele Před 4 měsíci

      No they have not. There is availability of materials for 80M year sales of ev. Lithium is 100% recycled. New batteries use less lithium, so in the near future there will be no need for mining. Also there is a lot of research with sodium batteries that use zero lithium. Sales of ICE, hybrids will decline with every ev sold, so for the future Toyota will sold a lot less cars, hybrids are less reliable than ev and will end up costing a lot more than a BEV.

    • @YeHtetWin
      @YeHtetWin Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@EnriqueThiele bro stop crying. how much do they pay you to reply to every comment to say the same thing?

    • @markin_
      @markin_ Před 3 měsíci

      @@EnriqueThielethe car batteries are recyclable in theory, but there’s no logistics and industry ready to do it in large quantities yet. Although there’s a lot of “battery minerals” in the ground, there’s a big environmental impact mining it and it’s mostly done in poor countries with no consideration to the workers safety at all.

    • @yulusleonard985
      @yulusleonard985 Před 3 měsíci

      @@markin_ Isnt today they mine cobalt mostly in US/Canada? Also the industry moving toward LFP without cobalt.

    • @rushnerd
      @rushnerd Před 3 měsíci +1

      Just Toyota being smart and extremely conservative as always. It really makes them stand out now.
      I could care less with my 88' Supra and 01' Celica GT-S though...

  • @alanmiller5018
    @alanmiller5018 Před 29 dny

    It’s April 09 ‘24, EV sales have slowed down and hybrid sales have maintained a steady pace. Looks like on the short term, Toyota’s gambit is paying. They are also carefully entering the EV market which will give them room once the sales pick up. Also, Toyota YTD on their stock is up 36% whilst Tesla YTD is down 28%.

  • @benjaminlance8831
    @benjaminlance8831 Před měsícem +1

    A poly source for energy is best.
    Why develop to limit toward one source?

  • @user-xb9dx2mp1z
    @user-xb9dx2mp1z Před 4 měsíci +12

    I heard Toyota is hedging a bet that EVs are not the way to go and it appears they’re winning as of right now.

  • @YokubouTenshi
    @YokubouTenshi Před 4 měsíci +9

    The hybrid model is the only economically viable option so far, even without incentives.
    EVs don't make any sense unless governments take taxpayer money and give it away to EV makers.

    • @CodyDavis91
      @CodyDavis91 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Incorrect. First and foremost, the cost of electricity is generally lower than the cost of gasoline. As a result, EV owners can save a significant amount of money on fuel over the lifetime of their vehicle. Additionally, the cost of electricity is more stable and predictable than gasoline prices, which can fluctuate greatly due to various factors.
      Second, EVs have fewer moving parts than hybrid vehicles and require less maintenance. This means that EV owners can save money on maintenance and repair costs over the lifetime of their vehicle. For example, EVs do not require oil changes or tune-ups, and their brakes tend to last longer due to regenerative braking.

    • @lordt78
      @lordt78 Před 4 měsíci

      @@CodyDavis91 EVs are good for those reasons you mentioned but right now hybrids are the way to go. Stop trying to push back!

    • @tribalypredisposed
      @tribalypredisposed Před 4 měsíci

      Lol! Yeah, give me the car with a higher production cost, lots more maintenance, worse efficiency, worse acceleration, worse cargo and passenger space, way more things that can break, because it is more "economically viable." Yes, the base model Toyota Prius is $27,000 and the base Model 3 is $39,000, but your five year ownership cost is lower for the Model 3 since it will retain more of its value and have lower maintenance and fuel costs.

  • @TenOrbital
    @TenOrbital Před 3 měsíci +1

    Toyota says it will have long range, fast charging solid-state-battery vehicles but not for 5 years.

  • @waynespringer501
    @waynespringer501 Před 3 měsíci

    AGREED the California Air Resource Board is a MAJOR PROBLEM!

  • @lanzer22
    @lanzer22 Před 3 měsíci +8

    If companies can convince us that smoking is good for you, I’m not surprised that people think climate change is not real and EVs are bad. People still haven’t figured out that the narrative of the largest industry is the opposite of what you should believe.

    • @CheapSushi
      @CheapSushi Před 3 měsíci +1

      if this is your take on the entire issue then you clearly aren't even pretending to understand it more thoroughly. You're just taking in a minimal amount of information to conform to your bias and personal views. And I'm not just talking about the political side of things but the sheer scale of some of these issues and realistic scenarios. You have the thought process of a child if this what you really think.

    • @lanzer22
      @lanzer22 Před 3 měsíci

      @@CheapSushi It's odd that you're literally supporting climate denial studies that are sponsored by Shell and other oil companies while saying that whoever support the mounting evidence on climate change and the impact on EV is "taking in a minimal amount of information"... There's literally hundreds of studies by now, outside of EPA, outside of EU's environmental board, but by universities across the globe, and it doesn't take that many hours to read through a good number of them. It's so odd to see people assume that when someone doesn't think like them - that it must be because they haven't studied or learned enough. That's not even a basis for starting an argument. Like, present some study, present data, that's how you can start an argument. Start with an insult? Well that only paint a picture of who you are.