• ninjan@lemmy.mildgrim.com
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    1 year ago

    Sure, but at least in Sweden 90% of all Model Ys (and there are a fuck ton of them) on the road are corporation owned cars. The heavy subsidies for BEVs made them very attractive especially since they had (this is changing rapidly right now) a very low rate of depreciation. I’d hazard a guess that this is a common pattern, i.e. cars that are privately used but commercialy owned as well as a lot of subsidies at play.

    Prior to the Tesla the most common corporation owned cars in Sweden were XC90s which aren’t exactly cheap either.

    Further what do you think I meant with high end premium? I meant expensive and the model Y is very expensive. Are you implying that if there was a sub $15K Dacia Logan MCV it wouldn’t sell better? A car like that with no bells and whistles but a BEV with decent range (say 300 km) would sell like hotcakes given that they’d pay for themselves for a majority of car owners. But instead they focus on stuff that is simply to expensive for the masses.

    • hascat@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      Further what do you think I meant with high end premium?

      The base model X costs twice the base model Y. I’d consider the X expensive. I wouldn’t put the Y in the same category.