{"text":[[{"start":6.9,"text":"As oil prices rise, a familiar narrative returns. Higher fuel costs will drive the shift to electric vehicles. But this mistakes timing for cause."}],[{"start":21.79,"text":"The economics of driving have long since shifted. The Tesla Model 3 Long Range, for example, consumes about 25 kWh per 100 miles. At an average electricity cost of 17.5 cents per kWh, that is about 4.5 cents per mile. For a 38 miles per gallon petrol car to match that, fuel would need to be at about $1.70 per gallon, which is a level far below where prices have traded in recent years."}],[{"start":56.14,"text":"US petrol prices climbed above an average of $4 a gallon this week for the first time since August 2022, according to the American Automobile Association. At today’s prices, the existing cost advantage of EVs becomes significantly more pronounced."}],[{"start":75.52,"text":"But if EVs are already often cheaper to run, why has adoption not moved faster?"}],[{"start":82.36,"text":"The answer is the payback period, or the time required for fuel savings to offset the higher upfront cost of an EV. For most households, the decision to make the shift is based on lifecycle savings but also how quickly those savings show up. An EV that is cheaper over 10 years can still feel expensive today."}],[{"start":103.49,"text":"For much of the past decade, relatively stable oil prices helped mask this tension. That kept petrol cars affordable to run in the short term even as they became less competitive over time. That stability also gave legacy carmakers room to keep factories running, maintain sales and delay restructuring their internal combustion business."}],[{"start":128.78,"text":"As fuel prices rise, the economics become harder to ignore. Payback periods shorten, accelerating decisions already under way. This is where pressure builds on legacy carmakers. They are forced to accelerate electrification while still carrying the fixed costs of their existing systems, including factories built for combustion engines, overlapping product lines and existing supplier networks. The result is a squeeze, with declining returns in the old model and intensifying competition in the new one."}],[{"start":164.82999999999998,"text":"At the same time, many of the remaining sources of hesitation are beginning to fade. Concerns about EV battery life, often framed around the risk of costly replacements, have proven less significant in practice. The battery replacement rate for plug-in electric vehicles made from 2016 onwards is less than 1 per cent, according to data from the US Department of Energy. Failure rates are low and warranties are improving. Perceptions of risk and their impact on resale values are starting to ease."}],[{"start":199.26,"text":"In markets like Europe, where legacy carmakers face higher cost bases, the shift is already visible. BYD’s registrations reached nearly 18,000 units in February, up more than 160 per cent and ahead of Tesla before the recent rise in oil prices, evidence that adoption is no longer being driven by fuel shocks."}],[{"start":223.5,"text":"As uncertainty fades, the remaining constraint is purchase price. The gap between upfront cost and operating savings is narrowing but for most carmakers it has not yet closed. This is where companies like BYD have gained traction by bringing EVs into price ranges where the savings are clear without a long-term bet."}],[{"start":246.2,"text":"For EV adoption to reach the mass market, the payback period must shrink to the point where the advantage is immediate. That means pushing into the sub-$40,000 range, where EVs begin to compete directly with mainstream petrol cars. Above that, buyers still have to make projections about fuel savings, resale values and durability."}],[{"start":271.03999999999996,"text":"For legacy automakers, particularly in Europe, this is where the problem begins. Their higher cost bases, including complex supplier networks and capital tied to internal combustion, make it difficult to deliver competitive EVs at these price points without eroding margins. New entrants have significant cost advantages over legacy makers, with manufacturing cost gaps that can run as high as 60 to 75 per cent, according to BCG, with higher labour costs in Europe and North America part of the constraints. That gap is already visible in pricing. Battery-electric vehicles in Europe have carried a price premium as high as 40 per cent over comparable petrol cars, according to IEA data, limiting their reach into the mass market."}],[{"start":322.53,"text":"Energy transitions are often remembered as moments of technological disruption. But in reality, they are driven by economics. The shift to EVs may look like a response to higher fuel prices but oil now shapes the pace more than the direction."}],[{"start":349.25999999999993,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1775180590_1953.mp3"}