We should talk after Tesla crashes and burns. Companies are spending money on EVs but I have seen no evidence that this is more than a case of hedging bets in the face of possible future regulations. EVs are still too expensive and charging times too long to make the viable for most consumers.
Also, the problems with the grid and supply are real. Too many EVs on a block and the local grid will go down. Given how incompetently the electricity supply has been managed over the last 10 years it is naive to assume that these problems are going disappear.
When car companies put billions into this technology they will be pressuring government to implement legislation so they can get a payback from their investment.
We know from experience that new technology gets better and cheaper all the time. I remember an engineer friend of mine getting the first electronic maths calculator I had ever seen. It was a big Texas instrument thing that he paid over $200 for in the mid seventies or about $900 in today's dollars. Now the calculator app on your cell phone will do a more than that thing ever did.
The grid issue isn't what it is
**** up to be. Demand will be increased but most of it will be during off peak times when people are sleeping and their cars are charging.