All very true but not exactly something the man in the street spent his idle hours thinking about.
No indeed. But it was an area I was specifically interested in and have followed for over 30 years. So HAD the man in the street been interested, he/she could have known.
I have to agree there was no mystery about the charging infrastructure, there simply wasn't one 17 years ago.
Hydrogen vehicles have been predicted for just as long, is the question for those still "when" ? Of course not. Prediction doesn't equal realisation so not inevitable even if not a surprise to some.
Hydrogen infrastructure is far, far more difficult and expensive due to the extreme difficulties making, transporting and storing hydrogen, with its tendency to boil off and escape. It is extremely pernicious and this was never likely be a good idea for personal transportation. It could now be done for some applications due to the advancing technologies, but today compares poorly with EVs for many applications, so it has missed the boat.
The problems with hydrogen were well known from the start. I was following the research and the practical applications. While there was a period where it was unknown whether batteries or hydrogen would win out because both had big technical challenges, that was a long time ago now. Since around 2010 it has been pretty clear what will win - at least for cars and smaller vehicles.
Hydrogen could still have some transport applications (e.g. trains/planes), but the likely scope keeps shrinking as battery tech advances further and further and faster and faster.
Politicians kept banging on about hydrogen in the UK simply because we had little investment in batteries/EVs and they needed to cling to something as an alternative to cover up the fact that they didn't really have a coherent plan.
Again, this is something I've been interested in for a very long time. The information is out there for those interested and there's a whole bunch of channels and blogs about these issues.
I think a lot of your thoughts are easy to see with hindsight, certainly for me, and looking back if you look hard enough maybe the signals were there. However, I don't believe the general public in this country or most others ever imagined or thought about EVs as mass market product let alone ancillary factors like charging infrastructure and efficiency of electric motors 20 years ago. Let's face it some still don't.
Well, with hindsight it is easy to say anyone's argument is hindsight! But I can assume you I've had the same views a long time for the same reasons.
I agree on the general public, most are completely ignorant of even how EVs work.