Absolutely bang on. The normal cost per mile at home is so low that the occasional public charge is no issue.
@neddyl12253 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this video. I like to see how various EVs cope with long journeys. I like your down-to-earth, no nonsense reviews - we can really relate to them. Keep up the good work!
@robk10033 жыл бұрын
Extremely useful and honest review. I'm a Service Engineer who is required to go anywhere between Central Scotland and London. At the moment I've got a petrol VW Golf. My employer is now only permitting EVs to be leased. So in a couple of years time I'll be making similar journeys.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
MG5 has "service engineer" written all over it, assuming your current Golf is an estate! Bit more range, bit more efficiency.
@timw19713 жыл бұрын
SUBSCRIBED. You seem to know exactly what the budget-conscious EV driver wants to know. Excellent video. Indeed, excellent channel.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Tim!
@richardsanders27943 жыл бұрын
Thank you for a very informative video. I take delivery of my MG on Thursday and anticipate a journey to France in the future. I had already decided to break the journey to the South Coast into two days. Your experience just underlines my decision.
@LossyLossnitzer3 жыл бұрын
I used to go to Perth from Oxford every Monday for a 9:30 meeting and used to leave ~ 3am and have a meeting also in Livingston @ ~ 3pm to then go back home. If I used an EV for this journey I do not think I would make the 09:30 meeting and would be very fat eating at all the charge stops which never gets factored in the costs. I probably would also have been too tired to get to my work in Portsmouth the next day. We are nearly there with EVs and if there was a charger at my meeting place it would have made sense but having a charging point at your destination is not reality yet. There are a few EVs as you say at a massive purchase cost will get me there in one drive charge. My second hand petrol cars only used to cost to purchase £1000-£1500 to buy and get £160 scrap when I changed each year or 2 so apart from killing the planet it did not kill my wallet - inf act just the opposite with company private mileage @ 45 pence per mile for the first 10,000 or so miles. Now that I drive very little I have kept my last car which I bought 2 years ago for £700 a 2002 Vauxhall Omega V6 2.6 I now only do ~ 4-5000 miles per year. Is it environmentally unfriendly of me to ask and EV manufacturer to make me a car with all those rare earth materials and other manufacturing costs including shipping of parts to the manufacturing site then shipping of the final car to the dealership whilst the environmental cost of scrapping a perfectly good working petrol car? - NOTE: I watch the lorries coming to the Cowley plant in Oxford come from all over Europe delivering widgets with diesel lorries which cannot be good for the environment for the end product (a Mini) then to be delivered by car transporters back to Europe. The only thing that hurts me is the Car Tax ~ £400 which is more than my Insurance :) so the government is sort of forcing me to make the switch and my local council is pushing some really stupid environmental policies like LTNs that keep people stuck in traffic jams and longer journeys with their engines running whilst pushing for a Zero emission zone in the city. I have already planned for electricity points at the front of my house when I had some electrical work done, so I will imagine I might make the switch shortly because of government pressure and now that I do not need to do 70,000+ miles a year because my children are now all grown up and I do not need to travel the country for sporting events and work. This is why I always bought a second hand reliable comfortable car that was disposable after 1 or 2 years. That would have cost a fortune in EV batteries and EV cars. I have trips to the Alps and used the German Autobahns it would be interesting to do that in an EV at 140 mph and we used to get there in record time to play a game of Ice hockey or go skiing as I used to do that at night in one journey, not sure we are there yet for EVs for that sort of Journey. Thank you for your video it was an eye opener just for the cost of the electricity and the different types of charging companies and costs it sounds like a real art to plan a journey with some leaving of the path on the way. I do not think I would be up for that sort of drama in my life just to drive to Scotland as I remember a trip I did just to watch a Annular eclipse in 2003 at the top of Scotland near Fresgoe that was a hard drive for a ~ 3 o'clock in the morning sunrise
@SquirreliciousMe3 жыл бұрын
The issue is still how much faffing around with charging, charging networks and apps is. As much as I want to be all in on EVs, those issues make it a pain in the ass if you regularly travel longer distances. For shorter journeys, EVs seem great now, but for longer stuff, especially if a common theme of your travel they’re still just too irritating to live with, never mind cost.
@paulinchris3 жыл бұрын
A very unbiased review, I have used 4 Tesla destination chargers without issue, lucky maybe? For someone who is hoping to visit Scotland in an EV later this year it was very revealing.
@williamthomas52233 жыл бұрын
I have not yet done a long journey in my mg5 but this video will help me plan when I do thanks
@dgurevich13 жыл бұрын
Great overview. I own the same MG ZS EV for a week now, and I haven't done any public charging yet. I live in Israel, so I'm getting good range due to the hot climate. and I suspect 95% of the time I will not need to public charge, even though my commute is 150KM round trip. Closest charger to me is 23KM away. I pay 0.12 pound for kwh at home, and cheapest public charger is 0.17 pound, most expensive is 0.44 pound. It is still massively cheaper then gas though.
@jonathanhammond37483 жыл бұрын
Great detail, information and content. Really helpful. Thank you! Great channel!
@pollockrobert3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this update. Interesting how weather impacts range significantly. I'm experiencing the same thing. A motorway drive of 44 miles at 5c, at night, wind and rain used around 60 miles of range.
@rogerkirby65863 жыл бұрын
Or is it the fact the lower temp means the heater works harder using more battery.
@devonbikefilms3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for a level headed and accurate review of costs. It’ll never catch on you know. 😁
@tonychallinor67213 жыл бұрын
Excellent post - thanks. I happen to agree with all the points you make. I used to make a monthly 650 mile round trip to see family but have only been able to make it twice since having my ZS EV. I was really stressed first time because going into Wales is a charging nightmare but adjusted my mindset and expectations and really enjoyed the second one. As you say the car is so relaxing to drive - amazing for the price
@sterlingarcher49893 жыл бұрын
Great video, it’s really pit my mind to rest about the cost of public charging. I was worried it would be cheaper to use my diesel instead.
@carolinebois57773 жыл бұрын
Just done first long trip in my e-NV200 40 kWh 7-seater combi. 700 miles averaging 3.6 miles per kWh. Was anxious about using public charging - until I did. Used InstaVolt as I wanted ease of contactless payment. Worked perfectly every recharge. As simple as buying coffee! Cost 7p per mile. As I only do long trips infrequently, I don't mind using more expensive providers if they deliver a reliable, easy to use service
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Can’t beat InstaVolt. I would definitely use them where available over all others.
@Ratbat693 жыл бұрын
i find with my niro, the teslas destination chargers do work, but it can take them a little while to start
@johnmcconville60553 жыл бұрын
I have a ZS EV and have been looking at doing Aberdeen to Hebden Bridge in it sometime.I think one thing that came out of your trip in England is which network to try and use.The pay as you go ones seem to be favourable rather than sign up for many RFIDs that I may never use.CPS is all I use as the car has never been in England yet.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
InstaVolt and Osprey are the best to just tap and go with a contactless card. Dead easy and reliable. BP Pulse does increasingly support contactless now too, so you don't necessarily need the subscription.
@peteobrien76143 жыл бұрын
I’m new to EV. My Skoda Enyaq arrives next Thursday. Your videos have been very informative. Thank you 👍
@jonstarr10003 жыл бұрын
I found your video very interesting. I have a ZS ev and it's a cracking car so easy to drive and comfortable. Price per mile comparison between the mg and my previous Ford ecosport is a lot ,even charging at home on full price tariff (still waiting for smart meter) it costs me 6p per mile against 14.5 with the Ford, a substantial saving by anyone's standard ,even at a public charger @7.9p its still half price plus I love the car.
@MacBaerFFM3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video and sharing your experience, as some other commenter as already noted, your reviews are down-to-earth and no-nonsense and, if I may add, not shying away from clear language (calling something to be crap when it is - indeed - crap). Even though the preconditions may not be fully transferrable from the UK to other countries and especially my home country, there are things that seem to be found everywhere: expensive IONITY chargers, occupied or out-of-service chargers, dysfunctional rfid cards etc. I envy you UK guys for at least having a chance to charge at home for as low as 5 pence per kWh..in Germany, we suffer from the highest cost per kWh throughout Europe (~0,30 EUR/kWh) . I fully endorse your conclusion on why worrying about public charger tariffs, including IONITY, especially for ad-hoc charging. If you're on long distance travel you're likely to be a member of a charge network subscription. My personal charge is a "handful" of charges on public chargers, a lot more on free chargers to be found at grocery stores like LIDL or ALDI (which are usually jammed, as we Germans love to get things for "free") and yes, charging at home (currently for 0,26 EUR/kWh) my feeble Renault Zoe. What amazes me is that the electric vs fossil (petrol or diesel) discussion seems to be ruled by economical views - everywhere. Same arguing by diesel drivers here - their king-size SUV with a diesel engine never consumes more than 4 litres per 100km (would have to convert that to miles per gallon), while going constantly at 160km/h across the Autobahn, towing a horse trailer and enjoying a 1000km range non-stop, leaving the car at the destination with no signs of fatigue, wear or the need of having a pee. And of course EV batteries - if the car does not burn down within a few weeks - will break down after two or three years. Personally, using an EV instead of a petrol or diesel is also about changing the mindset. It is, all costs taken into account, cheaper than owning a fossil car, but it's also about having at least the opportunity to use energy from renewable sources with little to no CO2 impact. A journey's leg being 1000km is not desirable for me. I just love to stop once in a while (every 200 or 300 km) for a break, a pee and a coffee. So, it seems that nowadays drivers live in their comfort zone, not willing to change a bit. Driving an EV is not an adventure anymore. Again, thanks for sharing this everyday life owners experience. The good and the bad. Double thumbs up.
@Trevorfoggia3 жыл бұрын
This is one of the best ev reviews I watched, so interesting to see the pitfalls and the benefits of ev travel. I’m considering an ev, possible a Soul. Due to its affordability and decent range as well as standard equipment. Actually, if any readers of this message have any advice, views on the Soul ev please please please tell me them. I’d be most grateful to you. I have just subscribed to your channel. Kind greetings from Cumbria in the U.K. Stay safe and well everyone.
@alcorpage3 жыл бұрын
My 6-year-old diesel estate, the last of a long line of diesel estates, will be replaced by an all-electric estate in July/August. Nowadays, 90% of my mileage is less than 6 or 7 miles per day, but each year I go to my home in France, Covid permitting. The cost of "from-home" charging will not be traumatic on those trips but I'm worried that there are next-to-no chargers close both to my route to the SW of France or any close to my destination above 7kw.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
I must admit I don’t know the first thing about charger provision in France. I do know there are far larger government incentives for car purchases there though, so you’d hope the infrastructure was on its way too.
@alcorpage3 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes What I've found out in the last few days is that neither "Zap Map" in the UK nor its equivalent in France are up-to-date regarding publicly available chargers.
@RTPeat3 жыл бұрын
I’ve had problems with our Ioniq on Tesla destination chargers, they’re really temperamental, I gave up and went to the charger at the local Tesco. Never tried them with our MG. Incidentally we used our Chargepoint card rather than Octopus Juice at the Ionity at Gretna on a recent trip and whilst it’s still expensive, it’s a bit cheaper at 58p rather than 66p.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
I couldn't get my Chargepoint card to authenticate at IONITY! It doesn't work at Osprey either, so I don't know what's up with it. Works fine at InstaVolt, so it's not completely duff. I quite like the ease of Octopus Juice though, going straight onto my bill is nice.
@RTPeat3 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes Yes, I met Andrew Till at the Ionity in Perth when he was doing his Lands End to John O’Groats and he had the same issue - my card worked fine, his wouldn’t authorise, so they do seem pretty variable. The Osprey chargers I just used Octopus Juice with no problems.
@ukcarver3 жыл бұрын
First time I’ve seen your videos and really enjoyed it such good information. I’ve got an I-Pace and with my home charger it’s very cheap to run, I’m on Octopus. In a few weeks time I’m going on a longer journey and as it’s the first time I’m quite nervous but I’m sure it will get easy with experience.
@nealm18143 жыл бұрын
Nice report. Very useful for me as I'll soon be making my first EV trip to yours and my homeland. Please keep it up and ignore the ICE trolls below. I really don't know why they bother to post on an EV channel when they should be over on Pistonheads.
@grahamleiper15383 жыл бұрын
Hoping the change to Swarco improves CPS. Changing from free doesn't bother me, hopefully charging will make them care about being more reliable and overstay fees might even stop PHEVs parking on a rapid for hours (thinking of a certain Chademo equipped Outlander in Fraserburgh that happily parks for hours at the only working CPS rapid for 30 miles).
@leftyamazed3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. I was most interested in this journey as I ocassionally drive from Norwich to my wife's family in Bellshill (near Glasgow) in my Qashqai and get 600 miles from £50 of diesel on that journey. I normally fill up and have 150 mile range left when I arrive. Normally that £50 gets me 450 miles around town. I definitely want an EV when I upgrade and I know that charging infrastructure is improving (I won't be able to charge at home). I personally think there is still some way to go before it is a viable option for me at the moment.
@bmwalker893 жыл бұрын
Great video fancy going to Cornwall before August for me 👀, really clear advice. Downloaded Charge Point now as well.
@hibbs793 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy listening to your stories must be the accent lol. This is why I am trying to save for a Tesla. For times like this when you are in the hands of the charging network I will feel totally confident in the Tesla charge network. Great video Cheers
@davidpearn59253 жыл бұрын
We love both our EVs - the T SR+ and the ZSEV.
@ozzieparky3 жыл бұрын
I think the AC temp control knob on the ZS EV has been taken off a toaster - either doesn't toast at all or if you turn it up by one micrometer then it burns to shit! 😀🤣
@tracyball50413 жыл бұрын
I was thinking about an ev for a new car next year but was worried about the cost of charging but it is a lot better than expected, thanks
@nathanwolf55473 жыл бұрын
Last time to drove from Boston to Dalkeith and back in my previous car, a Skoda Superb 2.0 petrol auto, it cost me nearly £200. As other networks improve their fast charging infrastructure Ionity will be forced to reassess what it can charge UK motorists. Do they rip off drivers in Europe? I’ll ask Bjorn Nyland but I doubt it. I’ve seen multiple videos that state the actual top charging speed for the MG is just under 80kW? Is this really the case? Even with a warm battery I’ve struggled to get more than half that rate. Now lockdown is coming to an end I will restart my own channel and include my reviews of my own MG as well as other EVs . I have a feeling we will be pretty much on parity with our views and reviews. I really enjoy your “no fuss” approach. Thank you.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
IONITY is every bit as expensive in Europe. It's all about providing a service to the partner manufacturers - VW drivers can pay 25p/kWh with the right subscription. Agreed on the charging rate - it is theoretically possible to charge at just under 80kW but I've never seen it. Saw 52kW on IONITY at Beaconsfield the other day, that's about it.
@ScottishNSRailFan3 жыл бұрын
In my local town, the Council provide free charging at three pairs of chargers. Informed of the aforesaid by the manager of Jewsons, who gets his “juice” for the Company ID3 there.
@jimanderson55673 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the video, lots of info. I was actually looking at the MG as a purchase. Lots to tbink about☺
@grahamwhite2415 Жыл бұрын
I'm sold already, but this reinforces my reasons for commitment to an EV. Charger installed next week even before I've looked at getting a car. I'm fortunate that I do have solar panels, and my commute is 50 miles. I'm home mid afternoon most days , so hopefully, home charging could be rather beneficial. And, after much research, I'm going for an MG ZS Trophy. Yes, I'm in a fortunate position for charging, but the whole object of the exercise is to reduce my costs and the pollution my vehicle creates.
@ModernHeroes Жыл бұрын
Well out of date on the cost front here sadly since public charging costs have risen significantly. It’s still possible to travel very cheaply with a good tariff (and solar!) though.
@MrPWalden3 жыл бұрын
just for a comparison i have a diesel qashqai that's a similar size to your MG. over the 6000miles i've done in it that it averages at 12.5p per mile in fuel. My leaf, averages around 3.5p per mile on home charger. i've not used it on long journeys yet so haven't done any public rapid charging. that being said i average 4 m/kwh in my leaf so an Ionity charger would be approx. 17.25p per mile. Ecotricity puts us around 7.5p per mile.
@jimmygee77173 жыл бұрын
Completely agree with you. Ionity does blight the public charging network somewhat. For arguments sake even if you paid a little more for using charge networks than say an equivalent journey in an ICE car. You would still get cheaper motoring on the whole as most will be charging at home.
@acelectricalsecurity3 жыл бұрын
The fragmented network allows companies like ionity to charge what they want, but on the other hand they don't force anyone to use them, plus they want to recoup their costs asap to make a profit. I was surprised the cost difference between electric and diesel was not that big, and personally for convenience I would use a diesel car is worth the extra cost.
@leenewman59823 жыл бұрын
Another fab video from you, Evs are the way forward I think
@mickwilson1273 жыл бұрын
I’ve yet to do a long journey in my 64kW eSoul, when I do it’s likely to be Glasgow to Brum during the summer, and I’m hoping for a one stop journey, but this is making me think it will need to be two stops.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Combination of a far larger battery and a more efficient car should see you right. Especially in summer!
@deanberesford22873 жыл бұрын
I have a petrol ZS.Very attracted to the ev but it's the lack of charging infrastructure at the moment and the rip off charging prices of some companies. I don't think I could cope with the charging anxiety at this time with the present set up.would be o.k local journeys but 300 miles plus say to Devon it's ano no for me .PS great video, well done.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
The rip off charging prices are nothing compared with the price of petrol 😉. You’re right about it being more hassle though - there’s no doubt about it. Worth it mind - the performance and refinement are leagues ahead.
@gwyningman23023 жыл бұрын
Went to Skye and Back to Wrexham for £21.80. Finished off the last 600miles of 1000 mile referral supercharger miles for Tesla Model 3 Had 40 miles remaining at Fort William.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
👌 thats cheating a little bit but I like it!
@greglewis88433 жыл бұрын
Never worry about the cost of public charging haven't needed it once since Christmas I look at it as a annual amount ev is wayway cheaper and nicer thanks
@robertguy28162 жыл бұрын
I've ordered the 22 model mg zs but I live in a flat so I'm looking at public charging or 3 pin charging so I'm little worried
@30025343 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this true life video. The only thing that worries me with public charging is the money held and the slow return to the bank account. I rarely have a £100 in my account extra, in case of. I think I might wait a few more years for the paying system to be better. Electric is the way to go tho.
@davidsworld58373 жыл бұрын
i would not have used the expensive ionity i would have used the one of two chargers at Gretna since you had to go past them. getting the 7.50 bp monthly is only worth it if there are enough bp chargers near you and that work. i am just wondering for that trip if it was an ioniq as i have not seen under 4 in really bad weather. and what a more miles would have meant in cost. i did apx 70 mile day out and had it in sports mode and get 5.6 i know kirby. its a very small town when it when i was last there really a village. i bet you did not stop off at devils bridge
@wobby15163 жыл бұрын
Try reading your posts before hand as they are very disjointed and hard to follow..
@tooflesstesla2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your experience.
@birdingbilly3 жыл бұрын
A medium sized diesel SUV might do 50mpg at motorway speeds, less with a headwind. Like you I don't worry too much about the cost of rapid charging it's just the reliability that excercises the stress cells. Thanks for sharing. Oh and on the Tesla charger I have quite good luck with these as they (some /all ?) will charge my Zoe at 22kw.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
I'd love to know why the Tesla Destination charger wasn't too keen on my ZS, I'm sure it's something simple.
@birdingbilly3 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes I know with my Zoe that it can be a bit fussy with some AC chargers if the earth impedence is a bit dodgy maybe the same with the MG.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Zoe is famous for that - haven't heard of MG owners having the same issue but you never know!
@farfromsensibletv3 жыл бұрын
Only some, most Tesla destinations are 7Kw
@patsy10003 жыл бұрын
That should have been boring but it was really interesting thanks I felt I learned quite a lot about ev driving in the real world. Cheers!!
@briankavanagh71913 жыл бұрын
MH, a quick google search shows Glasgow to Knutsford is around 222 miles, how did you do 222 miles in your MGEV before you first stop, as my MGEV fully charged (at home) only shows 158 miles range?
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
The starting point was Gloucester, I was travelling to Glasgow.
@briankavanagh71913 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes sorry just that it appeared the other way round..👍
@terry93253 жыл бұрын
The different charging bays round the country seem a nightmare having to use separate cards and never sure if there going to work when you try to charge your car ,it gives me no confidence at all , so for the moment I’m keeping my diesel suv and pay the extra fuel cost, plus I tow a caravan and as far as I know there is no e-car able to to tow my caravan or charging bays long enough for my car and caravan .
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Public charging has a long way to go there’s no denying it. Tesla X, Mercedes EQC and Audi e-tron are all capable of dragging your portaloo around if you insist.
@terry93253 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes wish I could afford those e cars ,but the day will come when the price of e cars that are able to tow will come down ,and the charging problems will be solved ,but what I do know my next car will be an electric one even if I have to give up my mobile portaloo
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
@@terry9325 they’re certainly not cheap options. It wont be long though - everything comes down in price with time 👌. Your point about charging bays not supporting towing vehicles is a good one - it’s surely going to become a very real issue once more vehicles that can tow are on the market.
@avidviewer13 жыл бұрын
Really interesting (as ever). Your comparison with diesel costs was fascinating and intriguing to see in an EV-related review. Your attention to relevance beyond the EV world also seems to have prompted some interesting comments (particularly useful for me as, sadly, I've recently had to sell my EV and return to a diesel). Thanks so much for another great review!
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! I’d be really interested to hear what EV you had and what made you switch back to diesel - I totally understand that some use cases would need it though.
@avidviewer13 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes 2017 Kia Soul which couldn't give me the seat height I needed (I suspect because the battery position raised the floor) so I switched back through necessity, not choice. A big disappointment, but I've still got your channel to keep me EV connected!
@bellshooter3 жыл бұрын
CYC cards also activate CP Scot chargers.
@ozzieparky3 жыл бұрын
Will they continue to do so once they go across to the new company?
@jonwetherell52143 жыл бұрын
Agree people need to be educated on charging point etiquette. My pet hate is rolling up to a hotel with a destination charger and it is blocked by some one who has plugged in and left their car on charge all night whilst they have dinner and go to bed.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
That’s the point of a destination charger though - the only way this can be overcome is by installing absolutely loads of them. A lot of people criticised Premier Inn for rolling out rapids but it certainly cuts out this issue.
@jonwetherell52143 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes People only being on a charging point whilst they need it is the solution. Amazed at the view that hotel chargers are exempt from the courtesy we are trying to show other ev drivers.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
@@jonwetherell5214 you can’t seriously be suggesting someone is going to get out of bed in the early hours of the morning to move their car because it’s finished charging. That’s ludicrous and this misplaced sense of “etiquette” is more damaging to the perception of EV ownership than any potential breach of it is.
@jonwetherell52143 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes No I’m saying check before you go to bed.
@acelectricalsecurity3 жыл бұрын
The thing I have noticed with companies selling electric is they charge what they want, where as most petrol stations are pretty close on price, with the exception of the motorway services. These companies are there to make a profit, and the cost of installing these networks are expensive, so they want a return asap.
@rogerkirby65863 жыл бұрын
Food for thought, When traveling to Colchester it is just outside my range so need to charge. I use BP Pulse, same site different charge points each time, one charge point I get charged £3+ and on the other I get charged £8+. same amount of electricity approx. use but get billed so differently. Question do trading standard check these charge points the same as pumps?
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
I don’t think so however there was mention in the recent government consultation around chargepoints that certified, verifiable metering could be imposed on them to make sure they’re billing accurately. BP Pulse has several different rather confusing tariffs for their chargers - higher power ones cost more as do different payment methods
@rogerkirby65863 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes The charge points are exactly the same only their serial numbers are different, I have lodged a question to trading standard via citizen advice. so will post the reply. Still not had a reply from BP Pulse. Have since charged at the first point again and got charged £3+ as before, will charge on the second point to see what that gives soon.
@rogerkirby65863 жыл бұрын
Further to my comments above I have received no reply from trading standards. Have received several emails from BP Pulse but only on the charge difference. They did say they were looking into giving me a refund but that has not happened yet, ( 2 month have passed ) never answered the question if trading standards check their chargers. I thought a yes / no answer not that difficult to do. They agreed the chargers did register different amounts of charge on those days, I have been back since to both chargers with equally flat battery and received the same amount of charge in both cases. Still no answer from BP Pulse if this will be reportable on their web site. I think this serves as a warning always check what the charger says you have had with what the car says you have had and report if different. I believe the chargers are not checked as petrol pumps are.
@lynnfisher43963 жыл бұрын
You can get your electricity cheaper than 5p on an Octopus Go tariff. They have a GO Faster tariff of 4.5p but only give 3 hour slots. There is a 5.5p GO Faster tariff which gives 5 hour slots starting from memory at 2000 through too 0200 or thereabouts. Something to think about as I believe your MGZS EV doesn’t have scheduled charging?.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
The car doesn’t have scheduled charging but I use an Ohme smart charger which provides that functionality (it also supports integration with Octopus Agile, too). Reducing the 4 hours to 3 wouldn’t be much use but increasing it to 5 with a slight premium sounds interesting. Do you know if the day rate or standing charge is different on those?
@lynnfisher43963 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes no, the standing charge and day rate stays the same. We just emailed Octopus and asked if we could go onto Go Faster, they said yes and asked which tariff ie either the 3 or 5 hour one and then gave us a choice of start times. Took less than a week to do in total. We had an email after about a month asking us to fill a questionnaire in and got a couple of quid ( the average daily rate paid by Octopus energy customers on a particular day) for doing so.
@nickgarland21433 жыл бұрын
Pod point update now allowed specified charge timing now if you have a home pod point.
@RichieAustinMagician3 жыл бұрын
Excellent video and information, just shows that the infrastructure needs to be so much better before its practical, cost of public charging definitely needs to come down and chargers need to be every where, I have a Mazda 6 estate normally fully loaded with my gear, on average get 740 miles out of a full tank which costs about £67 i often do the sort of miles in this video maybe a few times a week, EV's and and chargers are a long way off one being practical for me to use, adding a extra hour on each journey is not good and lack of chargers anywhere except motorways and towns , plus the cost of public chargers .. i'm actually shocked, i can be away from home for weeks if not a month at a time driving around the UK....
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
You travel 700+ miles several times a week? Do you ever actually do anything other than driving?
@RichieAustinMagician3 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes not really i'm a magician and drive all over the place for gigs can spend 6 hours driving all for a hours gig ,scotland to cornwal is quiet normal, pre covid shut down i was doing 40,000 miles a year touring about and thats only during the season which is feb to nov,
@pstanyer12 жыл бұрын
My daughter can only charge at public chargers she lives in a flat. She says she is paying about £ 22 for her ev instead of £ 30 in her petrol car. So she's saving roughly £ 8 which is nearly a third however she saves the London congestion charge every mon to Friday. So she recons a saving of £ 60 per week. But she does struggle to find working chargers.
@abakrem3 жыл бұрын
Good review, very helpful, thank you.
@lookoutleo3 жыл бұрын
thanks for posting , such a shame that even a better route planner is not perfect. i'm planning a 500 mile trip in a 30kw leaf althou i'll prob stop half way :)
@dennishaggerty4633 жыл бұрын
Very honest and independent, however you have completely put me off buying an electric car for anything other than local journeys. It was not the cost, or to some extent the number of charging points, the real issue is the unreliability and faffing about with different cards/helplines/route planning app etc etc. Would my wife put up with this? No, driving is not a hobby got her it’s a necessity. Unless these chargers are universal, as reliable and simple to use as a petrol pump, forget it. ‘Charge place Scotland’ seems the minimal specification UK consumers would accept. Currently it seems a mess and the lack of range forcing all these stops still renders EV ownership only a second car option. Great video though, a good real world account (or horror story as my wife said).
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like you need a Tesla - automatic route planning of charging stops at superchargers, plug in and charge with no external authentication.
@rachelrobinson49233 жыл бұрын
As someone who is agonising over my next car purchase, plug in hybrid or full EV, this just doesn’t help. A plug in hybrid would be great for local journeys of around 35 miles but fuel consumption drops off a cliff on a long run. But at least you don’t have to waste an hour or two finding chargers and waiting around while they hopefully work. I had decided I would go full EV, but this has swayed me back to a hybrid. It’s just too much hassle on a long run, the charging network, the cards, the apps, it’s too confusing. If you can charge at home “great” otherwise until you can buy an EV with a 500 mile range for £35K it’s not for me.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
What wasn't helpful? I didn't waste any time finding chargers, I knew where they were thanks to the route planner. They all worked apart from the one Ecotricity one that I expected not to and was only trying because it was cheaper than IONITY. Yes, you need to wait a bit for a car to charge - if you can't cope with that, an EV isn't for you.
@rachelrobinson49233 жыл бұрын
More the hour extra on your journey up and 2 hours on your way back. Plus for someone who knows nothing about EVs and chargers and tariffs and payment cards it all sounds gobbledygook to me.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
There's a learning curve, there's no doubt about that. Worth noting I'm driving one of the cheapest EVs on the market here, as I said in the video - more range and faster charging is available if your budget allows.
@solentbum3 жыл бұрын
Before deciding on what car to buy, make a list of all the journeys that you have done in the past two years. It might surprise you how few long journeys you actually make, also how many are repeat journeys for which you will soon know where to charge. I suspect that you will find that nearly all journeys you currently do are within the return range of most of the newer EVs.
@keithgeorge73383 жыл бұрын
Thanks for vid. At the first stop your figures seem to show car would do 200+miles. Did that seem correct/real world? Cheers.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Nah definitely not - the photo was taken a little bit after the charging started. I can’t remember what it was down to unfortunately but at 3.7mi/kWh you’re looking at 150 miles.
@niceboy603 жыл бұрын
this is the best reviewer online tells the GOOD , BAD & Ugly
@pete90092 жыл бұрын
Used well tried to use public chargers and its a living nightmare having to sign up half a dozen company's all diffrent pay formats why not just one uniform payment method.
@michaelfilbee22393 жыл бұрын
Good video....shame you can't just fill up like you can with ice cars, (go to any charger) ....just pay with one card like all petrol/ diesel drivers do.....thats whats stopping a lot of people getting ev's, even though most would be charged at home/work...
@jamesknightreading3 жыл бұрын
Do you use enough BP pulse chargers to justify the membership fee?
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Probably not (although I have used a lot recently) - but the convenience of the RFID card means I'll probably not rush to cancel the sub after the 3 month free trial.
@jamesknightreading3 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes I guess that's what they're counting on. It's a bit sneaky though, isn't it? What happens if you stop paying the fee? Does the RFID card continue to work, but at a higher cost perchance?
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
@@jamesknightreading AFAIK the rfid card stops working, not certain though.
@martincollins75473 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes I cancelled my Pulse membership and the card stopped working completely, I now use the app and pay the higher price, will probably renew membership when I’m travelling more.
@terrylivermore91073 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing that. Very interesting and useful.
@andrewgage69423 жыл бұрын
At present, my Smart diesel would have worked out cheaper as mine currently achieves over 75mpg even if I drive at 70mph, but still, I am looking to purchase an electric vehicle when I change, I will be solely reliant on public charging as I can't have a chargepoint at home and the infrastructure here isn't good enough for me to own an electric vehicle just yet, as my Smart has only covered around 150000 miles, there's still plenty of life left in it
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Just a little difference in comfort and refinement there 😳
@andrewgage69423 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes I agree that it is a little unrefined, comfort wise, not too bad, having said that, if the electric Smart did a reasonable range, I would love one, they're a great little car. I must admit that if I did change, the MG was a consideration, for me, range is an issue, not so much for long distance journeys but because of the poor infrastructure in this area, if I could find an affordable electric vehicle that would cover 350 miles, that's a buffer for any diversions, then I could get away with charging once a week, due to my job and awkward and long hours I wouldn't be able to use the only chargepoints in the area as the car park is closed by the time I finish work and not open when I go to work, I don't have long between shifts
@_Mark_H3 жыл бұрын
Interesting video as always. As an Impreza driver I’m watching with interest. I fancy a Tesla but I won’t lie the charging thing is a concern, but then with some older Tesla’s you get free Supercharging which is a big draw but then the car would be circa 5-6 years old so how efficient will the battery be I wonder 🤔 To replace a Tesla battery I imagine is big wonga! Ah well, the Impreza lives on for now.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Plenty of high mileage Model S around, I think they're pretty hardy battery wise. Tesla have been known to limit the charging speeds of older cars a bit though, which isn't great.
@jsouto773 жыл бұрын
Teslas have an 8 year warranty on battery and motors. There also obd tools and apps that you can check this. I also had two imprezas both jdm Sti's and both were great cars to me (hence the repeat). I used to put 240 a month fuel in the imprezas now on a mk7 golf R remaped to about 370bhp (stage one) and the cost has gone down to about £60 a month albeit i dont drive as agressive these days. I also have a tesla model 3 and on that it costs less than £10 for the month (octopus) and the power delivery is way better than any car ive had (you can do things that otherwise would take a bit of planning on any ice car due to the lack of lag). If you're on the fence just do it. You won't look back or miss the burble.
@_Mark_H3 жыл бұрын
@@jsouto77 curiously that’s a bit that was lacking after doing a track day in a Tesla, the lack of noise and acoustic involvement. There’s no denying the power was fantastic but an unusual experience just wafting at great speeds like a luxury catapult. I wonder if Tesla’s will nosedive in value as they approach 7-8 years old as the unknown costs associated with battery replacement could impact on residual values?
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Still £24k for the cheapest Model S on AutoTrader. 2014 with 95k miles. Does have unlimited free supercharging 👀.
@_Mark_H3 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes this is the intrigue, for that kind of money it is almost free motoring, BUT at that age the battery is coming to the end of its warranty period and that the gamble - car value plummets and you are faced with a four figure meaty bill. Catch 22 Huh?
@nigelstrarup3 жыл бұрын
Hi there hope you got your discount as I have gone with octopus 🐙 energy as I have got the ev and I love it Nigel 🤞🇬🇧
@davelocktalk3 жыл бұрын
I'm planning on buying a ev but if I have to go further I would just hire a petrol or diesel car for that journey till the charging stations get better in uk.
@acelectricalsecurity3 жыл бұрын
It's going to take a while to improve I think, nobody wants to put up the money for the infrastructure, until that happens it's going to be as it is for the foreseeable.
@davelocktalk3 жыл бұрын
@@acelectricalsecurity wish I had the money to buy a tesla there charging network seems to be spot on pity any ev can't use there network.
@acelectricalsecurity3 жыл бұрын
@@davelocktalk yeah they are aimed at the few not the many
@farfromsensibletv3 жыл бұрын
It's very quickly becoming the case that there are more and more CCS high power chargers across the whole country
@Brian-om2hh3 жыл бұрын
@@acelectricalsecurity Not quite true Anthony. Gridserve are in the process of building the first of their 100 planned large EV charging hubs on most major UK routes. The first one opened in Braintree in Essex a while back. It has over 30 chargers, from 22kw to 350kw, plus a cafe, post office, rest areas, a gym, plus a conference facility.
@Mr_Fahrenheit3 жыл бұрын
My EV cost me practically nothing to run I have a supermarket nearby with a charger that is on free vend not to mention the money I save on new exhaust, air filters, oil and oil filters, spark plugs, fuel injectors ect, or the massive cost of a cam belt snapping, happy days.
@johnrees83223 жыл бұрын
Aren'y hybrid owners allowed to use the rapid chargers? what's the problem?
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Very few plug in hybrids will actually charge at a rapid rate - so when they’re plugged into a 22/43kW AC connector and charging at 3.6kW, they’re hogging a vital resource. In the example I talk about in this video, there were several 7kW charging posts right next to the rapid - but they’re untethered, so you need to use your own cable.
@stephenclay68523 жыл бұрын
Good video that was.I agree with you I would think 80 + % of the time your going to charge at home so when you have to use a public rapid charger it’s not the end of the world.
@JohnR314153 жыл бұрын
I use public charging for two journeys - one of which means I charge probably 8 or 12 times a year, the other is another 1 per year. The 8-12 is in batches of four (two in each direction), so 1/3rd of the mileage is on home charging, 2/3rds on public.
@niceboy603 жыл бұрын
Renault Kadjar 1.5 Diesel achieves around near 900 miles with 55 litters of DIESEL ifs registered between 2015 and 2016 is exempt from Road Tax, Congestion, Charge and ultra low emissions, and its bigger than the MG
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
😂 no it doesn’t. 73mpg in a lump like a Kadjar? That engine is fucking miserable too - even in a smaller car.
@niceboy603 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes I bought that engine Twice Is my Second Car with Exactly the same Engine . No, Road, Tax, No Congestion Charge, Near 900 miles range , is not a Fast Engine however it has loads of Torque, which makes it Driving up hill with Full Boot and 5 people inside a Joy . This engine was so Good Mercedes, Nissan, Renault, Infinity were all fitting in their cars in around 2015,
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
I didn’t say it was unreliable, I said it was miserable, which it is. You’re wrong about the range and you’re also wrong about the congestion charge - only vehicles under 75g/km are exempt currently (0g/km from October) - a diesel Kadjar is neither.
@niceboy603 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes Well Nissan & Mecedes developed the Engine, It Has a good amount of Torque, Torque is more Important than Horse Power . Because Torque is relentless when going up hill even with Loads of weight, that's why Trucks are diesels You are quoting 2020, 2021 road Tax rules which has nothing to do with 2016 vehicles my Friend also bought a Kadjar a Few months ago registered in 2016 and she is Exempt from Congestion Charge, Road Tax and Ultra Low emissions, 10 years ago my Laguna 2011 1.5 dci after Traveling 922 miles yellow Fuel Light came on probably i could drive another 80 miles
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
“Road tax rules” have nothing to do with the congestion charge. 75g/km is the current limit for exemption and its 0g/km from October. The year the car was registered in is irrelevant. I don’t care who developed the engine, it’s horrible. Fine in a Clio or a Kangoo but it’s way out of its depth in anything bigger. If you need to suffer a horrible undersized 4 cylinder diesel engine to (not) have the same running costs as an EV on a journey charging it using the most expensive way possible I’m not sure it’s the win you’re lauding it as 😂
@wobby15163 жыл бұрын
Mores to the point no nitrous oxide emissions no CO2 emissions, or perhaps I should say low co2 emissions. I’ve solar and yes sometimes I’m able to charge from it, but that wasn’t my reason for going solar.
@matthewjburt64823 жыл бұрын
Great to watch some down to earth, real world reviews on consumption and economy. I don't know if you can answer this, but would the MG5 EV be any better on that journey?
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
MG5 I believe is a little more aerodynamic leading to increased efficiency - so coupled with the bigger battery I expect it'd perform a little better. Lack of adaptive cruise control might make the journey a bit more tedious, though!
@matthewjburt64823 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes Thanks for that. I'm not too fussed about the adaptive cruise control, as I've never had it, but I can see how it would make motorways more stress less.
@PaulMansfield3 жыл бұрын
I never got better than 46mpg on my Qashqai+2 with 2L turbo diesel, I'm amazed you could get over 70.
@wobby15163 жыл бұрын
I think what he was implying was you’d need to get! not he got!
@spookymap65333 жыл бұрын
What do you mean like your brake down you still have a service your ev It still has all the 12 volts parts and some Tesla have a problem with the bearings in the drive motor ( cost a lot ) So you found a car for that price,I still reckon even that a ev cost about £8000 more than a equivalent ice car and with all the cost of running a ice car it will still take about 8 years to brake even Look up that Australia guy he is more in to than me
@nickieredshaw78353 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your video
@MrAndrew9413 жыл бұрын
My VW ID get discounted charging at IONITY chargers because VW helped build IONITY
@roygardiner40023 жыл бұрын
Our 2 litre 4 seater diesel returns 70 mpg at 70 miles per hour on the motorway. When we can buy a Tesla ( the only totally reliable inexpensive charging network) for less than £25k (Model 2 in a year or two?) we will buy one.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Which 2 litre 4 seater diesel is that, Roy? I don't believe you, to be quite frank.
@nickevans70493 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes roy is a troll
@bellshooter3 жыл бұрын
My Leaf 30 worked fine on Tesla chargers.
@garysmith58583 жыл бұрын
BP are aware of the issue with the MG ZS EV crashing their chargers. It's when the car requests a reduced voltage. :-(
@howardbowen-RC-Pilot3 жыл бұрын
59.53 to do 775 miles. My petrol 117 quid but several hours less time and no hassle. Sorry this isn't selling it to me.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
🤷♂️ if half the price whilst using some of the most expensive chargers available isn’t enough incentive I assume the reduced tax, servicing etc won’t be either. Nor the environmental benefits. No pleasing some I guess.
@SNORKYMEDIA3 жыл бұрын
FIRST !!hahahaha Great content keep up the good work
@sailingoctopus13 жыл бұрын
"driving about 65mph on the motorway". This is what I find hard to credit. Most people I know drive about 85mph on the motorway. I get that driving slower in an EV will actually get you there sooner, because of reduced charging stops, but I don't know that I would be capable of driving at 65mph on a motorway, it would do my head in. I also get that it's safer, better for the planet and cheaper, but that's true in an ICE and yet I still charge along at 80mph. The difference between 65mph and 80mph on a 700 motorway mile journey amounts to two hours. Is this a price I have to pay if I go EV?
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
What motorway in the UK can you maintain 80-85mph on for a 700 mile journey? Pointless short bursts to illegal speeds aren’t really doing anything to your average journey time, certainly not what you think they are.
@sailingoctopus13 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes Typically, in pre-Covid times, I leave Ardrossan at 6pm on a Sunday, to avoid traffic, and drive 450 miles to Brighton, arriving about 1am. The return journey, I would fall out of bed into the car at 3am on a Thursday, to avoid the worst of the traffic, and arrive Ardrossan in time for the 9:45 ferry home to Arran. I did that journey every week for months and have done many similar. Disappointed to learn that such a journey wouldn't be possible in an EV. Fortunately I'm not likely to be making many such journeys again, but next week I'll be driving 470 miles Ardrossan to Bridport and then back a week later. Maybe car hire is the answer.
@sailingoctopus13 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes I think the point is that on those long journeys you can avoid the traffic by driving at high speed out of hours and lessen the ordeal, whereas in an EV you can't. I would have had no weekend at home for some of my mammoth weekly commutes over the last thirty years, Norwich, Reigate, Brighton, Tunbridge Wells, Cardiff. True in recent years I've chosen to fly, but that is a different kind of ordeal. Frankly, 65mph on a motorway is ridiculous.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
@Chris Mowatt this is just a variation on the usual tripe about needing to tow a caravan from JOG to LE every weekend without ever stopping. You might have some ridiculous requirement due to a stupid commute you’ve chosen but the vast majority of motorists don’t make the same poor life choices. No, the cheapest EV money can buy probably isn’t the right choice for you. Buy a Tesla with the biggest battery you can.
@sailingoctopus13 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes I already have an EV and was contemplating an MG5 as a motorway mile-eater, but it seems that it is not practical, despite what you say. I've only ever met one person that would drive at 65mph on a motorway from choice. God's teeth man, in your video you implied you would normally choose to drive at 60mph. Strewth!
@terryelston93623 жыл бұрын
I too have a mg ev, interesting thanks
@craigwood36573 жыл бұрын
Don't forget in the past the government cottoned on to people buying diesel cars because the fuel was cheaper. Now it's dearer than petrol. Then people started getting LPG conversions as that was a cheaper fuel, so that also became expensive. The same will happen with electric cars. The government don't like loosing revenue.
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Great, but petrol/diesel is only going to get more expensive along with more punitive measures for using cars powered by it like clean air zones 🤷♂️
@richardh67563 жыл бұрын
Have you heard that some MG zs have started to rust under the floor
@wobby15163 жыл бұрын
That’s an old lemon that been all but disproved.
@spookymap65333 жыл бұрын
Is that’s not the quoted price for your car so it’s possible to get the ice car cheaper, also do you use a standard plug at homes
@johnweston15703 жыл бұрын
thank you for the video great content. would,nt it be good if governments made tesla open up there network to all ev,s
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Can't say I'm a fan of governments meddling with private companies' operations in that kind of fashion - forcing the public charging operators to improve their offerings is a far better idea.
@johnweston15703 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes true hopefully charging operators will get better. you have to admire tesla for how they have built up there charging infrastructor second to none
@Petelmrg3 жыл бұрын
Another little elephant in the room is servicing costs for ev v. ice cars - and I think depreciation is going to be a factor as more people move towards ev ownership.
@G-Cam13 жыл бұрын
Totally agree... My Land Rover 7 year service (full belts and fluids etc) at a main dealer was going to cost over £2000! My Kangoo had its major service recently at a main dealer for under £100! Our MG ZS EV was just serviced and had the comfort update etc done for under £150 at the main dealer... As we get closer to the ban on ice cars and small vans I think the values will hit the floor... No-one is going to want them... The same goes for hybrids in the next 10 years... They are a stop gap and many BEV drivers used them as a stepping stone into full EV ownership.
@niceboy603 жыл бұрын
Fuel Savings are bit overrated This car is probably the Cheapest car in the UK for its size . A 2021 MG ZS petrol only Costs around £13,000 While the EV costs around £7000 more which is around £145 more every month for 48 months . When you add Charging monthly Subscriptions costs Charger costs, fitting Chargers at home adapter costs You might realise there's no savings what so ever . I still don't think EVs make any financial sense
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Not this again 🤦♂️. Comparing a base model manual ZS to the EV is a stupid comparison - they’re not alike other than the fact they both say ZS on the tailgate. Try a 1.0T automatic Exclusive at £20k
@niceboy603 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes I thought about that, the Comprassion was Excite vs Excite EV 🤔
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
Fine - an automatic Excite is £18k
@phareztrinimand3 жыл бұрын
Anyone thinking about a hybrid, it can do the trip twice on 1 tank of gas an a charge, anyone
@elongatedmush78053 жыл бұрын
3.7 per kWh! You must drive like a vicar 😂
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
The economy on the first part of the journey was definitely higher than usual!
@williamsmith16713 жыл бұрын
Wait until fuel duty goes on electricity
@ModernHeroes3 жыл бұрын
…. so it’ll become more expensive to drive electric, you can bet that fuel duty on petrol/diesel will rise at the same rate though, and the gap will remain or widen.
@williamsmith16713 жыл бұрын
@@ModernHeroes no petrol and diesel will be gone it will all be electric the government has to get the money from somewhere so if one source dries up another will be available WATCH THE NEXT FEW YEARS
@Brian-om2hh3 жыл бұрын
@@williamsmith1671 That would work wonders for all the people who rely on reasonably priced electricity, such as schools, industry, hospitals and thousands of people who use electricity to cook and heat their homes. It would push thousands more people into fuel poverty and wreck the economy you fool! The Government have already stated they will replace fuel duty with a system of road tolls.