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Suncor Energy Inc. T.SU

Alternate Symbol(s):  SU

Suncor Energy Inc. is a Canada-based integrated energy company. The Company's segments include Oil Sands, Exploration and Production (E&P), and Refining and Marketing. Its operations include oil sands development, production and upgrading, offshore oil and gas production, petroleum refining in Canada and the United States and its Petro-Canada retail and wholesale distribution networks, including Canada’s Electric Highway, a coast-to-coast network of fast-charging electric vehicles (EV) stations. Petro-Canada has a network of over 1,800 retail and wholesale locations across Canada, providing customers with a wide variety of fuel and service offerings including low-carbon fuel options. It is developing petroleum resources while advancing the transition to a low-emissions future through investment in power and renewable fuels. It also wholly owns the Fort Hills Project, which is located in Alberta's Athabasca region, approximately 90 kilometers north of Fort McMurray.


TSX:SU - Post by User

Post by ztransforms173on Oct 29, 2023 10:22pm
209 Views
Post# 35706681

I love my electric car – but I’d never buy one

I love my electric car – but I’d never buy one
Comment

I love my electric car – but I’d never buy one

Purchasing an EV feels risky amid uncertainty over whether it will hold its value

MG4

Ben Wilkinson is driving a new MG4, a family hatchback shipped in from China
Credit: Richard Parsons

I have a confession to make: I have an electric car. And what’s worse is that I love it.

It is cheap to run, easy to charge, I don’t get range anxiety and it hasn’t burst into flames yet.

So far, my experience with electric cars has been seamless and faultless, but I still wouldn’t buy one.

I have a new MG4, a family hatchback shipped to my home all the way from China, so there can be no pretence about me wanting one to save the planet.

The real reason I have one is simply that I needed a new car and could get one via my employer’s salary sacrifice car leasing scheme. The tax benefits of going electric are much greater so it was the cheapest option.

But most importantly, because I lease the car through a salary-sacrifice deal it means insurance, breakdown cover and tax (if there was any) is all priced in and that price is locked in for three years.

It is this peace of mind that I value most. Without it, buying an electric car in Britain today still feels like a big risk.

Putting aside the fact that I don’t have £30,000 in my back pocket, if I was to invest in a new car I’d want to know how much it was going to cost me year-to-year and that it was going to last.

We know very little about how much used electric cars will be worth in five, 10 or 20 years – especially as cheap Chinese models flood the market.

What is particularly concerning now is the surging cost of insurance that thankfully I am protected against. 

We reported this week how electric vehicles are in danger of becoming uninsurable due to the vast cost of any damage to the battery, with cars being written off after minor prangs and drivers being quoted thousands for an annual policy.

Manufacturers say batteries should last between 10 and 20 years, but if I’m forking out for a new car, I expect it to last a lot longer than 10 years. 

Even signing up to a three-year lease seemed like a gamble with the extra red tape and lack of working and available charging points across the country. 

After making the order, my local council said it would not let me install a charging point at my house because I do not have off-street parking. 

It didn’t matter that there’s no pavement in front of my house and the cable would cross over the boundary and onto the road by only a few inches.

Instead, I run a cable directly into an ordinary outdoor household socket, which is allowed but means the car takes a while to charge – more than 24 hours for a full charge or 300 miles, but it is not required often.

As most electric car drivers know, you still cannot rely on public chargers. I’ve lost count of the times I’ve tried to plug in while out and about and the charger doesn’t work or I haven’t got the right app to use it.

^^^

 

What did Rishi Sunak announce in net zero policy rethink?

  • The ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars to be put off by five years – from 2030 to 2035.
  • Households given “far more time” to replace their gas boilers with heat pumps, with only 80 per cent having to do so by 2035.

^^^

Electric cars are great, clean and are lovely to drive, but the infrastructure we’ve been provided with still does not inspire confidence. 

It’s the same with heat pump technology. It will undoubtedly improve and become cheaper, so why risk investing in it now?

Rishi Sunak did the right thing by pushing back the ban on new petrol and diesel cars until 2035. Britain’s transition to all-electric needs to happen naturally and gradually if it is going to work.

The public should not be the ones forced to gamble their own money on the practicalities of Britain’s net zero future.


Ben Wilkinson is head of Telegraph Money. Reach him at
ben.wilkinson@telegraph.co.uk

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/i-love-my-electric-car-but-id-never-buy-one/

z173

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