I thought long and hard about buying the hybrid model of my current vehicle in 2021. The deck was literally stacked against it due to a 6-month backlog due to the pandemic and the $25K (CAD) price differential. I blame the latter somewhat on Ford for stacking the hybrid model (here) with options I wouldn't normally order, but still that left a $20,000 gap that I simply couldn't afford. We drive to Florida every year so as an exercise we made notes on the availability of charging facilities along the way this year, with a view to a future electric choice. Unless things change dramatically a full-electric vehicle simply isn't an option for long-distance driving. Not only would stopping to charge add significant time to the drive, there just aren't that many working chargers. The situation will only worsen as more people acquire electric vehicles (in Canada it's mandatory by 2035), but difficult to visualize unless a lot more money is invested in charging infrastructure. As a case-in-point, the hotel complex where we live in Florida (3 hotels) has one charger with two outputs. When working they take an overnight to charge a Tesla. Fortunately there is seldom more than one on the property at a time. As bad as the situation is in the US, it's worse here in Canada if you live outside a major urban area. Our small town has one (1) electric charging station 10 miles away and the cost of upgrading one's home electric to accommodate vehicle charging is out of the reach of the average person. Coupled with the difference to purchase the electric vehicle I don't see the cost recovery curve anytime soon.
I also have ethical questions about how the lithium for the batteries is sourced and the rapidly increasing problem of disposing of dead batteries.