Alber Chonges is head of aalysis at bloomberg new energy finance, bloomberg and e f based in london. He says the bill was probably the most important thing that could have happened this year to keep the energy transition somewhat on track. We also talk about reaching a tipping point for widespread adoption of e vs and other clean technology.
In the tech world, there’s a common belief that once a new device hits 5% market penetration, it rapidly goes from a niche to mass adoption. According to Bloomberg, the US has just passed that critical 5% tipping point for new EV purchases. Norway, an oil-rich country, was first to hit that 5% mark in 2013 and today boasts a stunning 86% of new cars being fully electric. Now California is driving the US along a similar road away from gasoline and diesel by passing a new law that will only allow emission free vehicles to be sold by 2035. Even with that California law, how confident can we be that all new American cars will be running clean? What does the 5% tipping point mean for other clean tech adoption?
Guests:
Albert Cheung, Head of Global Analysis, BloombergNEF
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