The bikes are sold under an affordable payment plan of around $23 per month for 18-24 months. They cost around $13.5 per month in electricity to charge, a huge drop from the $250 in gasoline that comparative petrol-powered delivery bikes cost.
Now that’s a real cost saving right there! Wow.
But I think it’s going a bit far to say she’ll revolutionize transportation for all of Africa. They are present, from what the article seems to imply, in a single city in Ghana and only just expanding.
But I think it’s going a bit far to say she’ll revolutionize transportation for all of Africa.
Maybe going a bit far to say she will do it, but they’re right that what she’s doing will do it. That is, of course, because e-bikes will revolutionize transportation on all the continents (except Antarctica) and there’s no reason for Africa to be an exception to that.
Shame about the “plan to launch a four-wheeled vehicle” part, though – that’s just trying to repeat North America’s mistakes.
If only people would realise that going electric has so many benefits. But people are so heavily propagandised that they just refuse to see the simple truth.
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An electric car uses 10-20x more batteries than a PEV, the downside is cars, not EVs.
Have you ever driven an EV or where do you get this sort of “information”?
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Charging at home most of the time means no wait, plus much cheaper. I’m so happy to never again have to goto a local gas station!
Battery replacement could be expensive but probably not necessary. A recent survey found tenants of my car still had 85% battery capacity after 250,000 miles - most people never put that kind of mileage on a car.
I was on a recent road trip where the route planner recommended stops as short as 4 minutes to optimize total travel time. For the longest I’ve, it scheduled a charge at a mall, and was ready before we even got to the food court.
Sure, on the few days a year I’m on a road trip more than 150 miles each way, charging takes longer than gas fill ups but it’s really no big deal, plus more than made up for by charging at home most of the year
Most of the time you charge an EV at home or at a level 2 charger nearby. Fast charging is rarely required, except when travelling long distances where it can be a factor, but that’s largely overblown. Also, battery swaps after very rarely required and noisy if there time the battery will last the lifetime of the vehicle.
My point is that you’re cherry picking negative points here while it’s obvious that you have no practical knowledge of the topic. And of course public transport is always a better option, if that is available to you.
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Assuming off street parking, you may still convince your landlord or HOA to install chargers - make a business case for it.
My ex’s HOA just took such a proposal seriously: they got quotes, explained it’s covered by the reserve, and put it up to vote. It did get voted down by the membership, but it’s up to you to convince enough members
I always find it funny when people go through a lot of contortions to explain why they don’t want an EV. If you don’t want an EV don’t buy one. Nobody cares.
Uh, if you look at the top of the thread, blacklazor just said there are downsides to EVs in response to a post that made it sound like it’s all upside. They’re not “going through a lot of contortions”, they’re answering questions in good faith. They don’t have to have driven an EV to know it won’t work for their situation, and they detailed why.
Me, I want an EV, I just don’t have the money and I need at least 300 miles of range before having to charge. It’s not “range anxiety”, I do long road trips annually so I need to drive that far on a single charge no matter what my fuel is.
If you don’t want an EV don’t buy one.
They already said they aren’t.
Nobody cares.
The number of replies to the guy in this thread show that to be a lie.
What’s the point of writing this comment? Other than because you care about other people’s choice of vehicle?
Yes everyone lives in a single family home that they own.
I have in fact owned one. I also owned a hybrid electric vehicle within the first year of commercial availability, probably before you were born. (You wouldn’t even believe the amount of dumb shit people spouted at me about batteries back then.) However the trade-offs between different vehicle energy sources is real and tangible. It makes no sense to deny it.
Early this year, GNN reported on the woman behind the wheels of Wahu!, an electric bicycle company and the only native electric vehicle manufacturer in Ghana, Valerie Labi.
From 100 bikes sold to delivery drivers on a pay-per-week basis, Wahu! has shifted another 200 units, driven down the cost of insurance, and is set in the coming months to unleash Africa’s first native 4-wheeled electric vehicle.
Okay, but why does the gender need to be mentioned?
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it is more impressive due to gender gap and gender inequality indexes on Ghana.
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It makes her a positive role model for women in Ghana and other countries.
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It’s more flavour to the story.
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Sex even. Apparently it is too hard to call someone a woman.
It’s pretty fucked up and bigoted to assume the wants and needs of one city apply to an entire continent. I mean good on this woman for milking the ignorant but eww…
Where were you for Theranos mate?