Sunday, December 22, 2024

David swapped his LandCruiser for an EV. He says he’s saved $35k in diesel

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Driving an electric vehicle (EV) in regional Australia used to be a feat of planning and logistics, but country owners say range anxiety is now a thing of the past.

“It’s a fear in people’s minds that it can run out of charge anytime and you will not find any charging stations. It’s not like that,” said Mackay-based mining engineer Samial Hasnat.

Mr Hasnat is one of a growing number of country Australians who have made the switch to an EV in an effort to save on fuel and maintenance costs.

Samial Hasnat says charging his EV is more convenient than filling up at the bowser.(ABC Tropical North: Cristy-Lee Macqueen)

Recent data compiled by the Electric Vehicle Council shows nearly 20 per cent of EV sales are coming from rural and regional Australia, trailing inner and outer metro areas on 39 and 43 per cent respectively.

The council’s Ross De Rango said there were about 3,000 EVs in regional Queensland, a significant jump from a couple of years ago.

He attributed the uptake to increasing model choices with a wider range of price points.

“We’re at a point where nationally about one new vehicle in 12 is an EV; it takes time for people to become accustomed to a new technology,” Mr De Rango said.

Longer distances, more fuel savings

David Mayne said he had saved tens of thousands of dollars in fuel costs by switching his diesel four-wheel drive for an electric car.

The central Queensland farmer said he was concerned about how his EV would handle the 40-kilometre round trip on a dirt road he’d make to the nearest town of Springsure, but it had had no issues.

A white small car crossing a cattle grid on a dirt road with gum trees

Mr Mayne says his EV requires very little maintenance despite regularly driving dirt roads.(ABC Capricornia: Megan Hughes)

He paid $72,000 for his EV and has driven 70,000 kilometres in the 18 months he’s owned it.

“If I’d done that same 70,000 kilometres in our old LandCruiser that would have been about an extra $35,000 just in diesel,” Mr Mayne said.

“If we keep it three years … we’ll have paid for the cost in fuel savings alone.”

A man's hand holding a charging pump plugged into a white car

It costs Mr Mayne less than $1 to charge his EV when accounting for the price of his home solar system.(ABC Capricornia: Megan Hughes)

Mr Mayne lives off grid and charges his car through solar power.

“If I take into [account] the cost of the solar system and what I expect it to produce over its lifetime, it’s about 70 cents to charge this car completely empty to full on the solar system we’ve got here.”

Mr De Rango said it could still be cheaper for people to own EVs in Queensland’s south-east corner, depending on their electricity provider.

He said there were more providers to choose from in Brisbane, which had better cost-saving tariffs available for overnight EV charging.

Infrastructure still needed

Caboolture farmer Andrew Radford also transitioned the primary vehicle on his cattle farm away from a diesel ute nearly two years ago.

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