Survey comes as President Biden continues to push regulations that foster ârobust EV marketâ

Almost half of current EV drivers in the United States want to switch back to gas-powered vehicles, according to a recent survey.
The report conducted by consulting firm McKinsey & Company showed that 46 percent of American EV drivers are âlikelyâ to return to vehicles powered by internal combustion engines.
Despite Americansâ growing discontent with electric vehicles, President Joe Biden continues to tout his administrationâs efforts to boost EV production. In March, Biden finalized historic restrictions on gas-powered vehicles, requiring carmakers to increase electric and hybrid vehicle sales by 56 and 13 percent, respectively, by 2032.
The McKinsey survey comes just a month after the Biden administration announced tariffs on $18 billion of Chinese goods, including an increase of 25 to 100 percent on the EV tariff rate, as part of the presidentâs effort to incentivize âthe development of a robust EV marketâ and protect âinvestments and jobs from unfairly priced Chinese imports.â
Meanwhile in June, several automakers, including General Motors, Ford, and Nissan Motor Co., announced cuts to their EV production in response to a global sales dip. General Motors reduced its initial goal by 50,000 units, Ford announced a temporary suspension of investment requirements for EV infrastructure, while Nissan halted the development of certain battery-powered vehicles.
General Motors CFO Paul Jacobson called the cut in EV production â100 percent demand driven.â
âWe donât want to end up in a position where we give out a production target and then we just blindly produce and end up with hundreds of thousands of vehicles in inventory because the marketâs just not there yet.â
The McKinsey report included 30,000 consumers from the United States, China, Norway, Australia, Italy, France, Japan, and Brazil, and found that 35 percent of all consumers surveyed plan to switch back to gas-powered vehicles due to a lack of charging infrastructure and 34 percent due to higher costs. The report also noted purchase intent for EVs is continuing to rise but at a slower rate than in 2022 and 2021.
Original News Source â Washington Free Beacon
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