Summary

Norway is on track to become the first country to eliminate gasoline and diesel cars from new car sales, with EVs making up over 96% of recent purchases.

Decades of incentives, including tax breaks and infrastructure investments, have driven this shift.

Officials see EV adoption as a “new normal” and aim for electric city buses by 2025.

While other countries lag behind, Norway’s success demonstrates the potential for widespread EV adoption.

    • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      There only appears to be two realistic choices, and I’ve enumerated them both. Feel free to clarify your position then.

      • DrunkenPirate@feddit.org
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        10 hours ago

        Are you saying a slaughterman that is vegetarian could be proud of his choice? While he still runs his slaughterhouse and kills animals?

        • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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          2 minutes ago

          Not exactly analogous to our scale here with Norway, but if the goal was less meat consumption by the population, my answer would be: yes. There would unambiguously be one fewer meat eater. Norway’s achievement is many more orders of magnitude greater, meaning real change, and real impact on fewer emissions being generated.

          I think you’re under the mistaken impression that if Norway shut off all petroleum exports that emissions would fall and stay down. They wouldn’t. Other petroleum producers would simply ramp up production to fill the gap in supply. So what you’re proposing is the worst of outcomes. You appear to have Norway not transition to EVs, but shut down petroleum production.

          You’re proposing an outcome of higher emissions, which is contradictory to your goal of fewer emissions.