California has a power grid that doesn't immediately fail when it gets too cold or too hot. No, californian power utilities just kills 12 people each year and regularly starts forest fires.
I'll be honest, this summer hasn't had any rolling blackouts in North Texas. Oh, I bet it has nothing to do with the expanded wind/solar/battery farms. Can't be the renewables!
Actually, I think CA regularly has more power outages than Texas. https://poweroutage.us/
Though I'm not sure how many people your utilities are found to manslaughter in a given year.
I live in CA and have had one power outage in the last 3 years.
Also, that's a model Y, which starts at $45k and maxes out at $55k before the $7.5k EV tax rebate. Add 8K if you think full self driving is a good idea for some reason.
I live here as well. Power works just fine. Only been here for about 7 months but still. Occasionally when it's 110° they'll pre-cool my house with my thermostat then raise the temp during peak hours but that's just smart. For all its problems, California isn't as bad as the rep it gets.
Had a friend from back home (Midwest) giving me shit for living in a dystopian hell hole and paying more taxes for the privilege. I pointed out he pays more taxes than I do plus I was hiking in the mountains last week because I got tired of going to the beaches.
Lol people forget this. Had a major storm roll through the area a few years back (Iowa) and everyone was lined up at the gas stations bitching while I was doin Dandy with a full battery (along with the others who keep their tanks full or recently filled up). A lack of preparation will not be mitigated magically by technology.
A generator is one option, solar panels or just regular battery backups are another option.
If the grid is up but overloaded you can also just charge slower, which for 99% of people will work.
At least you can charge your car at all, if there is an actual power outage, the gas pumps won't be working at all, and even if they are, it requires so much infrastructure to deliver gas to the pumps that they won't be working for long.
Edit: since when did an expensive car equal easy to operate? Historically, the more expensive the car gets the more caveats to the operation there are.
no it isnt... what the fuck are u talking about that generator has an extra shitty ice engine in it plus the losses on the generator, batteries, and motors. its way less efficient, theres no need to lie, EV are marginally better than ICE cars even if u dont lie about extreme edge cases like this.
Edit: since when did an expensive car equal easy to operate? Historically, the more expensive the car gets the more caveats to the operation there are.
My favorite example of this is the BMW i8. Here is a video which shows how to open the hood. Even the dealership recommends to the sales team taking the car into the shop and having trained technicians....open the hood. I guess its "Fuck You" if you ever break down on the side of the road. https://youtu.be/fxe_b2GRwok?si=MGy3lwov8bd36-4m
Much higher? Yeah, might not be. But definitely still higher efficiency than when a human is controlling the output of a combustion engine to get it to be efficient at pushing loads. (ie driving a non-electric)
If you're running the generator at it's efficient output. If you're running at max load it gets murky on efficiency. You'd probably need an evse that can manually set a current limit to get the best efficiency
This is just banning the sale of low efficiency generators. You want an inverter in your generator these days, it saves you gas/propane over time. They're also quieter and produce more stable and "clean" power for potentially sensitive electronics.
The zero-emission in 2028 is really restrictive. There aren't going to be any small engine that's zero-emission. It's going to end up becoming portable battery banks. And those those might be okay to get you through a power outage. They aren't the same as generation.
California doesn't produce water either. Or more accurately if you are trying to live in the late-stage capitalist hell-hole that is california, it doesn't produce power or water for you.
I believe California will actually get wetter with climate change, at least parts off it. And our reservoirs are pretty high right now last year they were higher than any point I can remember and I'm not a spring chicken.