Electric and hybrid vehicles use electricity and a combination of electricity and fuel, respectively, to reduce reliance on fossil fuels and decrease emissions. Proponents argue that it significantly cuts pollution and advances the transition to renewable energy sources. Opponents argue that it increases vehicle costs, limits consumer choice, and may strain the electric grid.
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State Electorate
Response rates from 149 Adelaide voters.
28% Yes |
72% No |
26% Yes |
69% No |
1% Yes, but only if it includes subsidies for low-income citizens to afford these vehicles |
2% No, incentivize consumers and manufacturers instead of forcing them |
0% Yes, and require all emission based machinery to transition to clean energy |
1% No, not until we find an eco-friendly and humane way to acquire the materials |
0% No, the government has no right to interfere in consumer choices or the free market |
|
0% No, electric vehicle parts can be just as dangerous to the environment as emissions |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 149 Adelaide voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 149 Adelaide voters.
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Unique answers from Adelaide voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@9WKJ9XZ2mos2MO
No, eletric cars should be banned as they are more harmful to the environment than petrol or disel cars
@9TBZZV64mos4MO
cars should be prodominently electric by 2035. And all diesel cars should be registered as historical monuments that can be legal to drive anytime
@9ZLYK7F2mos2MO
The government should mandate outcomes on reducing environmental impact to certain thresholds, and let Manufacturers determine how to meet those mandates. They should not prescribe specific technologies over others.
@9R2HPS76mos6MO
Yes, but provide lower prices or help to acquire them
@9ZV8Y5Y1mo1MO
Oh hell no, electric cars suck so bad, imagine a world that is silent. I will never get that feeling again when I hear and see a cool car drive past, I am not going to live in a world where v8s, v10s and turbos don't exist
@9ZNMKQB2mos2MO
No, focus on making the grid sustainable and environmentally-friendly, in particular nuclear, and then begin to heavily incentivize, not force, citizens (and manufacturers) to convert.
@9ZF35QB2mos2MO
Yes in cities/highly populated areas. However in country/outback Australia this would be an issue as charging stations would be few and far between when your hours from the nearest towns
@9ZDYQSW2mos2MO
i beleive they should invest in hydrogen fuel cells and insetivize more efficient peroleum cars as i dont believe that elctric cars are vaiable
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