No new Jags for a year

AleNod

Zorg Guru (III)
British Zeds
Joined
Dec 19, 2018
Points
139
Location
Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
Model of Z
Z4 E89 20i sdrive roadster
Last edited:

t-tony

Zorg Expert (II)
Supporter
British Zeds
#ZedShed
Joined
Dec 31, 2013
Points
226
Location
Torksey Lock,Lincoln, England
Model of Z
E89 Z4 23i Auto
Google can’t find that link Alex.

Tony.
 

OhioZ4

Zorg Legend
American Zeds
Joined
Jun 15, 2021
Points
79
Location
Ohio USA
Model of Z
E85 2.5i Sport
Heres a couple more links . It seems Jaguar will be the next car company to go belly up . This crazy infatuation with electric cars is beyond me .


 

AleNod

Zorg Guru (III)
British Zeds
Joined
Dec 19, 2018
Points
139
Location
Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
Model of Z
Z4 E89 20i sdrive roadster
Heres a couple more links . It seems Jaguar will be the next car company to go belly up . This crazy infatuation with electric cars is beyond me .


I'm with you on that. This side of the pond it's being driven by regulations. Manufacturers are starting to have to sell a certain percentage of electric vehicles which increases every year. For every ICE car they sell over the allowed percentage they get fined. And it's a lot - basically makes any surplus (to allowed percentage) ICE cars unsellable. I think its a sliding scale until 2030 when all vehicles sold are supposed to be electric. I haven't explained that very well have I ?

So manufacturers are seeing the writing on the wall. Looking at this, Jaguar has a bit of an aging line up and it seems already reducing sales. They must have done their sums and think its cheaper to shutter production now, rather than continue with even more reducing sales, penalties applied to basically ever ICE vehicle they manufacture making it even more unattractive, reducing sales even further.

Just a mad mad world to me . . .

And starting a new job shortly, I've just gone out and bought a pure petrol car, while I can. I suspect it might be the last petrol driven car I ever buy . . .
 

Zephyr

Zorg Guru (III)
Supporter
Joined
Aug 10, 2022
Points
136
Too optimistic target for whoever believes 2030 will be achieved.
Gas stations, refinery industries, tanker ships, oil rigs, multibillion companies, countries, millions of people depend and live through oil.
Further to that, more millions of mechanics, repair shops, parts suppliers, after market companies and even small business owners such as exhaust shops etc will be affected.
And on top of that, what kind of charging network will support that huge fleet of electricity sucking vehicles?
Somehow I feel that we are played.
I will most likely be stardust by 2030 but I would really like to be around just to see what kind of turbulence this decision will bring to the economy.
 
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