Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (2024)

Around the world, governments and automakers are focused on selling newer, cleaner electric vehicles as a key solution to climate change. Yet it could take years, if not decades, before the technology has a drastic effect on greenhouse gas emissions.

One reason for that? It will take a long time for all the existing gasoline-powered vehicles on the road to reach the end of their life spans.

This “fleet turnover” can be slow, analysts said, because conventional gasoline-powered cars and trucks are becoming more reliable, breaking down less often and lasting longer on the road. The average light-duty vehicle operating in the United States today is 12 years old, according to IHS Markit, an economic forecasting firm. That’s up from 9.6 years old in 2002.

“Engineering quality has gotten significantly better over time, in part because of competition from foreign automakers like Toyota,” said Todd Campau, who specializes in automotive aftermarket analysis at IHS Markit.

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (1)

Age of cars and light trucks on U.S. roads

6%

Gasoline and diesel

4%

Newer passenger vehicles still mostly run on gasoline.

And they’re likely to stick around for a while.

2%

Hybrid and electric

1 year old

5 years

10

15

20

25

30

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (2)

Age of cars and light trucks on U.S. roads

6%

Newer passenger vehicles still mostly run on gasoline. And they’re likely to stick around for a while.

4%

Gas and diesel

2%

Hybrid and electric

1

10

15

20

25

30

year old

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (3)

Age of cars and light trucks on U.S. roads

6%

Newer passenger vehicles still mostly run on gasoline. And they’re likely to stick around for a while.

4%

Gas and diesel

2%

Hybrid and electric

1

10

15

20

25

30

year old

Source: 2017 National Household Travel Survey

Today, Americans still buy roughly 17 million gasoline-burning vehicles each year. Each of those cars and light trucks can be expected to stick around for 10 or 20 years as they are sold and resold in used car markets. And even after that, the United States exports hundreds of thousands of older used cars annually to countries such as Mexico or Iraq, where the vehicles can last even longer with repeated repairs.

Cutting emissions from transportation, which accounts for nearly one-third of America’s greenhouse gas emissions, will be a difficult, painstaking task. President Biden has set a goal of bringing the nation’s emissions down to net zero by 2050. Doing so would likely require replacing virtually all gasoline-powered cars and trucks with cleaner electric vehicles charged largely by low-carbon power sources such as solar, wind or nuclear plants.

If automakers managed to stop selling new gasoline-powered vehicles altogether by around 2035, to account for the lag in turnover, that target might be attainable. Both California and General Motors have announced that they aim to sell only zero-emissions new cars and trucks by that date. But those goals have not yet been universally adopted.

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (4)

How “Fleet Turnover” Lags New Car Sales

If electric vehicle sales gradually ramped up to 60 percent over the next 30 years, as projected by analysts at IHS Markit, about 40 percent of cars on the road would be electric in 2050.

NEW VEHICLE SALES

VEHICLES ON THE ROAD

100%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and hybrid

62%

50%

41%

Electric

Electric

0%

2020

2030

2040

2050

2020

2030

2040

2050

In order for almost all cars on the road to be electric by 2050, new plug-in sales would need to quickly ramp up to 100 percent in the next 15 years.

100%

NEW VEHICLE SALES

VEHICLES ON THE ROAD

100%

95%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and

hybrid

Electric

50%

Electric

0%

2020

2030

2040

2050

2020

2030

2040

2050

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (5)

How ‘Fleet Turnover’ Lags New Car Sales

If electric vehicle sales gradually ramped up to 60 percent over the next 30 years, as projected by analysts at IHS Markit, about 40 percent of cars on the road would be electric in 2050.

NEW VEHICLE SALES

VEHICLES ON THE ROAD

100%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and hybrid

62%

50%

41%

Electric

Electric

0%

2020

2030

2040

2050

2020

2030

2040

2050

In order for almost all cars on the road to be electric by 2050, new plug-in sales would need to quickly ramp up to 100 percent in the next 15 years.

NEW VEHICLE SALES

VEHICLES ON THE ROAD

100%

100%

95%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and

hybrid

Electric

50%

Electric

0%

2020

2030

2040

2050

2020

2030

2040

2050

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (6)

How ‘Fleet Turnover’ Lags New Car Sales

If electric vehicle sales gradually ramped up to 60 percent over the next 30 years, as projected by analysts at IHS Markit, about 40 percent of cars on the road would be electric in 2050.

NEW VEHICLE SALES

VEHICLES ON THE ROAD

100%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and hybrid

62%

50%

41%

Electric

Electric

0%

2020

2030

2040

2050

2020

2030

2040

2050

In order for almost all cars on the road to be electric by 2050, new plug-in sales would need to quickly ramp up to 100 percent in the next 15 years.

NEW VEHICLE SALES

VEHICLES ON THE ROAD

100%

95%

100%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and

hybrid

Electric

50%

Electric

0%

2020

2030

2040

2050

2020

2030

2040

2050

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (7)

How ‘Fleet Turnover’ Lags New Car Sales

If electric vehicle sales gradually ramped up to 60 percent over the next 30 years, as projected by analysts at IHS Markit, about 40 percent of cars on the road would be electric in 2050.

NEW VEHICLE SALES

VEHICLES ON THE ROAD

100%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and hybrid

62%

50%

41%

Electric

Electric

0%

2020

2035

2050

2020

2035

2050

In order for almost all cars on the road to be electric by 2050, new plug-in sales would need to quickly ramp up to 100 percent in the next 15 years.

NEW VEHICLE SALES

VEHICLES ON THE ROAD

95%

100%

100%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and

hybrid

50%

Electric

Electric

0%

2020

2035

2050

2020

2035

2050

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (8)

How ‘Fleet Turnover’ Lags New Car Sales

If electric vehicle sales gradually ramped up to 60 percent over the next 30 years, as projected by analysts at I.H.S. Markit, about 40 percent of cars on the road would be electric in 2050.

NEW VEHICLE SALES

ON THE ROAD

100%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and hybrid

62%

41%

Electric

Electric

0%

2020

2035

2050

2020

2035

2050

In order for almost all cars on the road to be electric by 2050, new plug-in sales would need to quickly ramp up to 100 percent in the next 15 years.

NEW VEHICLE SALES

ON THE ROAD

95%

100%

Gas and hybrid

Gas and

hybrid

Electric

Electric

2020

2035

2050

2020

2035

2050

Sources: Fleet turnover model via Alarfaj, Griffin and Samaras in Environmental Research Letters; Electric vehicle sales projection via IHS Markit

What’s more, some economic research suggests, if automakers like G.M. phased out sales of new internal combustion engines, it’s possible that older gasoline-powered cars might persist for even longer on the roads, as consumers who are unable to afford newer, pricier electric cars instead turn to cheaper used models and drive them more.

So policymakers may need to consider additional strategies to clean up transportation, experts said. That could include policies to buy back and scrap older, less efficient cars already in use. It could also include strategies to reduce Americans’ dependence on car travel, such as expanding public transit or encouraging biking and walking, so that existing vehicles are driven less often.

“There’s an enormous amount of inertia in the system to overcome,” said Abdullah Alarfaj, a graduate student at Carnegie Mellon University who led a recent study that examined how slow vehicle turnover could be a barrier to quickly cutting emissions from passenger vehicles.

That study suggested several options for speeding up the rate of turnover. For instance, policymakers could focus on electrifying ride-sharing programs like Uber and Lyft first, since those vehicles tend to drive more miles on average and get retired sooner.

There are also options for getting older gas-guzzlers off the road. In 2009, the United States government ran a program called “Cash for Clunkers” that offered Americans rebates to turn in their older cars for newer, more fuel-efficient models. In all, the government spent about $2.9 billion to help 700,000 car owners upgrade their vehicles.

Some Democrats have proposed reviving that program to accelerate the shift to electric vehicles. Senator Chuck Schumer, the majority leader, has proposed a $392 billion trade-in program that would give consumers vouchers to exchange their traditional gasoline-powered vehicles for zero-emissions vehicles, like electric cars.

Still, a “Cash for Clunkers” program could prove relatively inefficient, said Christopher R. Knittel, an economist at the M.I.T. Sloan School of Management who has studied the policy. The original program often benefited Americans who were on the verge of trading in their vehicles anyway, he said, and it often missed the drivers who were driving particularly gas-guzzling vehicles long distances.

“It’s a blunt tool, although there are likely ways to improve the program,” Dr. Knittel said.

As an alternative, Dr. Knittel noted, a tax on carbon dioxide emissions could prove more effective, by increasing the price of gasoline and giving drivers a clear incentive both to upgrade to cleaner vehicles and drive less. Yet lawmakers have often steered clear of hiking gas taxes, worried about both political blowback and the effects on low-income drivers.

That leaves a final, potentially powerful option: Cities could reshape their housing and transportation systems so that Americans are less reliant on automobiles to get around. Some cities have had success in reducing their dependency on cars: Since 1990, Paris has reduced the share of trips taken by car in city limits by 45 percent, by building new bus and train lines, expanding bike paths and sidewalks, and restricting vehicle traffic on certain streets. In Germany, the city of Heidelberg has made reducing car dependency the central plank of its plan to reduce emissions.

Most American cities are far from looking like Paris or Heidelberg. But there are still plenty of changes that cities could make to reduce car travel at the margins, said Beth Osborne, director of Transportation for America, a transit advocacy group. That could entail adding denser housing in walkable urban areas, expanding public transportation or making neighborhoods safer to walk around. Governments could also redirect spending away from constructing new roads that tend to induce sprawl and more driving.

“While we’re ramping up to full electrification, we want to make sure that we’re not increasing emissions from all the other cars still on the road,” said Ms. Osborne.

Finding ways to curb private vehicle travel even modestly could have a significant impact, researchers have found.

One recent study in Nature Climate Change looked at what it would take to drastically slash emissions from passenger vehicles in the United States. If Americans keep driving more total miles each year, as they have historically done, the country may need some 350 million electric vehicles by 2050 — a daunting figure. Doing so would also require a massive expansion of the nation’s electric grid and vast new supplies of battery materials like lithium and cobalt.

But the study also explored what would happen if the United States kept overall vehicle travel flat for the next 30 years. In that scenario, the researchers found, the United States could cut emissions just as deeply with around 205 million electric vehicles.

“We’re not saying everyone would have to take the bus to work,” said Alexandre Milovanoff, an energy and sustainability researcher at the University of Toronto and lead author of the study. “A lot of people do need private vehicles to get around, and in those cases, electric cars make a lot of sense as a climate solution. But we shouldn’t limit ourselves to thinking about electric vehicles as the only option here.”

To be sure, it’s conceivable that fleet turnover could end up happening even faster than current models predict as automakers invest more heavily in electrification. One possibility is that the nation reaches a tipping point: As more and more plug-in vehicles start appearing on the roads, gas stations and crude oil refineries start closing down, while auto repair shops shift to mainly servicing electric models. Eventually, it might be too much of a hassle for people to own conventional gasoline-powered cars.

“It would not shock me if the transition eventually starts accelerating,” said Dr. Knittel of M.I.T. “Right now it can be inconvenient to own an electric vehicle if there are no charging stations around. But if we do get to a world where there are charging stations everywhere and few gas stations around, suddenly it’s less convenient to own a conventional vehicle.”

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021) (2024)

FAQs

Electric Cars Are Coming. How Long Until They Rule the Road? (Published 2021)? ›

Vehicles on the road in 2021

How long until electric vehicles rule the road? ›

When will all cars be electric? Electric cars may be rising in popularity, but it may take state intervention for them to replace gas cars entirely. In California, automakers are to phase out gas cars by 2035. We'll have to wait and see whether other states follow suit.

How long until we have all electric cars? ›

Auto manufacturer conversions

Automakers are working on converting their offerings to all-electric vehicles, but their timetables for conversion differ. Some have committed to ending gasoline car sales by 2035; others may take until 2045-2050 to get there unless required by law.

What year will we have to drive electric cars? ›

As part of the Advanced Clean Cars II regulations, all new passenger cars, trucks, and SUVs sold in California will be zero-emission vehicles by 2035.

What will happen to gas stations after 2035? ›

Gas station numbers have been decreasing at a sharp rate in the past three decades and the trend is expected to continue, with at least a quarter of service stations globally at risk of closure by 2035 without significant business model tweaks, according to consulting firm BCG.

What happens if electric car runs out on highway? ›

Electric cars can be shifted into neutral and pushed over short distances, and they can be towed, but only on a flatbed truck. If you do find yourself stranded with a dead EV battery, you really only have one option: Call a towing company to get you to a charging station.

Will there still be gas cars in 2050? ›

Given all the constraints, experts expect gas cars and trucks to be available until at least 2050, though a handful of states will phase them out as soon as 2035. To date, those states include California, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island and Washington.

What will replace electric cars? ›

While electric vehicles (EVs) are having a moment right now, there is an offshoot product looking to replace the battery-powered EV: hydrogen cars. Unlike traditional EVs, which draw electricity directly from a battery source, hydrogen cars mix hydrogen and oxygen into a fuel cell to produce electricity.

Why are electric cars not the future? ›

While bigger batteries allow drivers to travel farther between charges, they also make the cars heavier, more dangerous, more expensive, and worse for the planet. The "range anxiety" that has resulted in massive batteries is another reason EVs don't work as a replacement for gas cars.

Are electric cars cheaper than gas? ›

A 2020 Consumer Reports study similarly showed that EV drivers tend to spend about 60 percent less each year on fuel costs compared to drivers of gas-powered cars.

Can you still drive gas cars after 2035? ›

The policy will not ban people from continuing to drive gas cars or from buying and selling them on the used market after 2035. The rule will also allow automakers to sell up to 20% plug-in hybrids, which have gas engines, by 2035.

What would happen if everyone switched to electric vehicles? ›

This latest report estimates that by 2050, a switch to zero-emission vehicles and a decarbonized electric grid would mean 2.79 million fewer pediatric asthma attacks, 147,000 fewer pediatric acute bronchitis cases, 2.67 million fewer cases of pediatric upper respiratory symptoms and 1.87 million fewer cases of ...

How much will electric cars cost in 2025? ›

The cost of batteries may further decrease in 2023, making EVs more affordable in the coming years. According to Bloomberg, EVs will be cheaper to buy than comparable gas-powered ones by 2025, and the estimated average cost of an electric car by 2025 is expected to be around $35,000 or even lower.

What will happen to gas stations when electric cars take over? ›

“Gas stations will exist, but will have a different kind of model,” said Amaiya Khardenavis, a Wood Mackenzie analyst. And many of today's gas stations will evolve into EV charging stations. “Gas stations are prime real estate locations, so they are excellent candidates for installing charging infrastructure,” he said.

What year will gas stations be obsolete? ›

Fast forward to 2013, and station numbers had decreased by 25% or almost 50,000, and by 2020 that number had shrunk to 115,200. A 2019 report by BCG predicts that 80% of conventional gas stations could be driven (pun intended) out of business by 2035. Lapilanders casino is een 100% Nederlandse online casino.

What year will gas run out? ›

According to the MAHB, the world's oil reserves will run out by 2052, natural gas by 2060 and coal by 2090. The U.S. Energy Information Association said in 2019 that the United States has enough natural gas to last 84 years.

What is the electric car law 2025? ›

Beginning January 1, 2025, the CEC must assess the uptime of EV charging stations. The assessment must include considerations for equitable access to EV charging stations in low-, moderate-, and high-income communities. The assessment must be updated every two years.

How far can you drive in an electric car before charging? ›

Electric vehicle (EV) driving range and electric car mileage per charge varies, but typically drivers can expect an average of 250 miles in a single charge. Keep in mind there are factors that can affect an EV's range, including weather, battery size, and more.

Will all cars be electric by 2050? ›

In a report last month, Thunder Said Energy, a Europe-based energy research firm run by industry analyst Rob West, said that even if 97% of new car sales in the developed world are fully electric in 2050, there will be about 1 billion gasoline-powered and hybrid vehicles on the world's roads that year.

What will happen to gas cars? ›

What will happen to gas cars after 2023? Gas cars will continue to be produced, purchased, and driven for years after 2023. Gas car bans do not go into effect until 2035. As of September 2023, only nine states are committed to these bans at that point.

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