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Electric cars: UK government urges drivers to switch while barriers remain
Summary
The UK Department for Transport has launched the 'Get that electric feeling' campaign promoting a £3,750 Electric Car Grant and plans to add 100,000 local public chargers; the article reports continuing barriers for many drivers including limited charger access, rental and property constraints, high public charging costs, weak used EV values, and limited model choice.
Content
The UK Department for Transport has launched the 'Get that electric feeling' campaign across TV, radio and digital channels. The campaign highlights a £3,750 Electric Car Grant and says the government will add 100,000 local public chargers over the coming years and reform planning rules to help people without private driveways. The article reports that, despite these measures, practical barriers still affect many drivers and households. It notes issues such as charging access, running costs, property and rental limitations, and limited model availability.
Main facts:
- The DfT campaign promotes a £3,750 Electric Car Grant and says over 50,000 drivers have used the scheme, according to the article.
- The government says it will roll out an additional 100,000 local public chargers "over the coming years" and intends planning reforms to ease home charger installation.
- Reported barriers include sparse charger coverage in rural or hard-to-reach areas and limits for renters or properties with covenants that prevent installing private chargers.
- The article reports that public charging can be expensive for those who cannot charge at home, and that used EV values and limited model range are additional concerns for some buyers.
Summary:
The campaign signals the government's intent to encourage electric vehicle uptake by highlighting financial support and planned charger rollout. Reported practical limits—access to chargers, charging costs, property restrictions, and resale and choice issues—mean many drivers still face obstacles. The government has announced charger expansion and planning reforms; the timeline and detailed effects are undetermined at this time.
