UK drivers would only need to charge an electric car 20 times a year
The average British driver would only need to charge an electric car 20 TIMES A YEAR and barely have to use a public charger, says Hyundai
Hyundai says 85% of Britons are worried about running out of battery in EVsThat’s despite motorists driving an average of 108 miles a week when its current Kona Electric has a 289-mile range on a single chargeWith drivers covering 5,616miles per annum, that’s 20 charges of the EV HyundaiThree in five polled also said they have off-street parking to fit a home chargerThis means these drivers will almost never need to use a public charging device
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The average British motorist would only need to charge an electric car once every three weeks – with most drivers hardly needing to use the public charging network, according to Hyundai.
In a UK poll, the Korean motor manufacturer found that 85 per cent of motorists are worried about an EV running out of battery and having nowhere to charge.
This is despite the average driver, surveyed by Hyundai, only driving 108 miles per week, which is just over a third of the claimed 289-mile range of its current Kona Electric on a single charge.
UK drivers only need to charge an EV 20 times a year: A study by electric car maker Hyundai claims motorists will only have to plug their battery models into a charger once every 3 weeks
The poll of 2,000 motorists revealed more than half (56 per cent) are considering an electric car as their next vehicle.
But it also uncovered a raft of concerns that need to be dispelled in order for the vast majority of drivers to ditch their petrol and diesel motors.
Not least continued fears about range anxiety and charging worries.
According to the poll, the average British motorist covers 5,616 miles per year, based on a weekly distance of 108 miles.
Hyundai says its range-topping Kona Electric with the 64kWh battery could cover that annual mileage with fewer than 20 full charges, based on its claimed eco performance.
That said, What Car?’s Real Range assessment of this Kona version says the on-the-road range is 259 miles – 40 miles shorter than what ‘official’ tests suggest.
That already pushes minimum annual charges to 22, before taking into account the widely acknowledged fall in battery efficiency in the winter months, with the lithium-ion units dropping in performance levels when the temperature drops – a common occurrence in the UK, of course.
An average UK motorist covers 5,616 miles per year, based on a weekly distance of 108 miles. The range-topping Hyundai Kona Electric can cover that annual mileage with fewer than 20 full charges, based on its claimed eco performance
Hyundai’s study also found that 61% of UK motorists have driveways or garages to install a home charger. This means most drivers would ‘very rarely need to use any of the UK’s public charging network’
Hyundai’s study also attempted to dispel the worries about charging infrastructure after it found that six in 10 (61 per cent) of respondents said they had a driveway or garage to install a home charger.
The tallies with property records which show that a third of households in England do not have off-street parking.
The car maker says that this figure suggests most drivers would ‘very rarely need to use any of the UK’s public charging network.’
Despite this, 85 per cent of the licence-holding panel said there are worried that there are not enough public charging points available to cope with the increasing demand from EVs.
Hyundai says there are almost 25k public chargers across the UK – almost five times as many as there were in 2016
Hyundai says there are already almost 25,000 publicly-accessible chargers across the UK – almost five times as many as there were in 2016 and numbers will accelerate as Britain nears the ban on new petrol and diesel cars from 2030.
More than a third (35 per cent) like the idea of an electric car but are worried they won’t understand how to drive one. This rises to 72 per cent among 18-to-24-year-olds.
Ashley Andrew, managing director at Hyundai UK, said there are still ‘a number of obstacles we need to overcome’ when it comes to persuading Britons to covert to electric cars.
‘We’ve found the barriers to making the switch for first-time electric owners are education on how the car will fit into your lifestyle as well as getting to grips with slightly different terminology compared to traditional petrol and diesel vehicles.
‘There is very little difference between driving an electric car compared to one with a combustion engine, and many find an EV is actually easier.’
The research also found more than half of those polled (57 per cent) don’t understand the terminology around electric cars.
Just a fifth (20 per cent) of motorists understood what ’64kWh’ – the battery size – related to on an electric car, according to the study.
And 76 per cent think companies which have staff parking should be installing charging points to encourage employees to have an electric car.