http://www.noozhawk.com/article/tam_hunt_electric_vehicles_market_dominance_20131210#.UqfksSeVOho
Tam Hunt: Are Electric Vehicles Already Halfway to Market Dominance?
By Tam Hunt  12.10.2013 

[image  
http://www.noozhawk.com/images/uploads/121013-HuntFigure1.jpg
Figure 1. Kurzweil on the five paradigms of increasing computing power
]

Electric vehicles have been all the rage in the last few years, but those
who have studied EVs and their history know that this isn’t the first
go-round at the rodeo for this “new” technology. In fact, EVs were the most
popular type of vehicle at the dawn of the vehicle era. In 1899, more EVs
were sold than gasoline-powered cars. Albeit, the numbers were small (about
1,500 EVs were sold in that year), but nonetheless, EVs were the dominant
technology for at least a decade. And then Mr. Henry Ford came along with
his Model T and ensured the ascendancy of petroleum-powered cars for the
next century.

There were a number of fits and starts in the EV industry, every couple of
decades, but at no point were EVs anywhere near as dominant as they were at
the dawn of the transportation revolution. Most adults living now are aware
of GM’s EV1 and the tawdry history of that vehicle in the 1990s. There was
even a movie made about it, Who Killed the Electric Car?

It seems, however, that this latest phase in the development of EVs is
likely to be more than a blip in automotive history. EVs have come on strong
in the last three years, with dozens of EV designs either on the market
today or soon to be. And sales are picking up quickly, albeit from a very
modest starting point.

Norway is leading the world in terms of EV sales. In November, EV market
share reached a staggering 12 percent. California has reached about 1.2
percent of all cars sold and comprises about one-third of U.S. EV sales.

In terms of the U.S. as a whole, we are fast approaching 1 percent of all
sales coming from EVs (pure battery electrics, BEVs and plug-in hybrid
electrics, PHEVs, but excluding hybrid car sales). EVs will comprise about
two-thirds of a percent for all light-duty car sales in the United States in
2013. We’ll easily pass 1 percent in 2014; 1 percent is still very small —
way too small — but it turns out that reaching 1 percent is a really
important milestone. In fact, the game may be won when 1 percent is reached.

Huh?

Ray Kurzweil, an American inventor and entrepreneur, discovered the Law of
Accelerating Returns by studying numerous technology adoption curves. The
classic example concerns computing power. Moore’s Law holds that computing
power will double about every two years for the same cost. Sixty years after
Gordon Moore, Intel’s former CEO, made this observation, the law holds true,
though we’re actually doubling now about every year.

Kurzweil discovered, however, that Moore’s Law is just the latest paradigm
keeping a much longer trend going, as Figure 1 shows.

So how can 1 percent of all EV sales suggest in any way that we’re on the
road to a world dominated by EVs? Here’s why: 1 percent is halfway between
nothing and 100 percent — in terms of doublings. That is, there are seven
doublings from the start of growth to 1 percent and seven doublings from 1
percent to 100 percent. One double is two, which doubled is four, etc.

Kurzweil’s best example of the counterintuitive nature of his law is the
Human Genome Project. This was a government-funded effort to decode the
entire human genome in about 15 years. Well, halfway through the project the
effort was only at about 1 percent completion. Many observers wrote off the
effort as a failure that couldn’t possibly reach its goal. Kurzweil,
however, wrote at the time that the game was won because 1 percent was
halfway to 100 percent in the terms that actually mattered: the rate of
improvement in sequencing technology.

And he was right. The Human Genome Project finished slightly early and
helped bring down the costs of genome sequencing technologies by orders of
magnitude, as well as dramatic reductions in the time it takes for
sequencing. We can now pay about $1,000 to sequence our own genome in a
matter of days.

Applying the Law of Accelerating Returns to EVs

Back to EVs. It seems incredible, but the following is a mathematically true
statement: If customers continue to buy EVs at the same rate of growth as
we’ve seen in the last two years, all cars sold in 2020 will be EVs. This is
because seven years is seven doublings, and seven doublings from 1 percent
gets us past 100 percent. Of course, the “if” in my statement is the key. No
one should reasonably expect that we’ll see 100 percent rates of growth in
EV sales every year through 2020 — we won’t. This rate will surely slow down
substantially as various obstacles present themselves.

But even if the rate of growth averages “only” 50 percent each year, we
would reach 100 percent of all sales by 2026. This won’t happen either, but
it is reasonable to expect that a very substantial percentage of all cars
sold will be EVs by the mid-2020s. Figure 2 shows the result of various
average growth rates over time. Even at 20 percent annual growth EVs
comprise almost half of all cars sold by 2034.

Figure 2. EV sales as a function of various growth rates.

Year — 100%; 50%; 30%; 20%; 10%
2013 — 1%; 1%; 1%; 1%; 1%
2014 — 2%; 2%; 1%; 1%; 1%
2015 — 4%; 2%; 2%; 1%; 1%
2016 — 8%; 3%; 2%; 2%; 1%
2017 — 16%; 5%; 3%; 2%; 1%
2018 — 32%; 8%; 4%; 2%; 2%
2019 — 64%; 11%; 5%; 3%; 2%
2020 — 128%; 17%; 6%; 4%; 2%
2021 — 26%; 8%; 4%; 2%
2022 — 38%; 11%; 5%; 2%
2023 — 58%; 14%; 6%; 3%
2024 — 86%; 18%; 7%; 3%
2025 — 130%; 23%; 9%; 3%
2026 — 30%; 11%; 3%
2027 — 39%; 13%; 4%
2028 — 51%; 15%; 4%
2029 — 67%; 18%; 5%
2030 — 87%; 22%; 5%
2031 — 112%; 27%; 6%
2032 — 32%; 6%
2033 — 38%; 7%
2034 — 46%; 7%
Barriers to Adoption

The Law of Accelerating Returns isn’t really a law, of course. There’s
nothing inevitable about technology development or adoption curves. If there
was, the Betamax video player would be in every household today. While
Kurzweil’s data shows that many technologies do follow the traditional
S-shaped development curve and continuously improve, the fact remains that
the vast majority of new technologies and new ideas don’t become ubiquitous.

So the hard question is: Why do some technologies become ubiquitous and some
not? And in the case of EVs, are we on the road to ubiquity, or are there a
number of roadblocks preventing a future in which every garage or street
curb has an EV keeping it company?

There are a number of obvious obstacles right now that are keeping sales
figures in the low single digits in the U.S., including, among others: 1)
lack of widespread awareness about the availability and benefits of EVs; 2)
high upfront cost of EVs, driven primarily by battery costs; 3) range
anxiety due to insufficiently widespread public charging stations and
similar concerns about the speed or cost of charging; 4) grid integration
issues arising from so many EVs (though research has already found that the
existing U.S. grid could accommodate, primarily through nighttime charging,
a heckuva lot of EVs); and 5) tough competition from other types of
vehicles.

I’m going to focus in the rest of this essay on what is probably the most
difficult obstacle to overcome — battery costs, because the solution is not
simply a matter of throwing money at the problem.

Kurzweil’s Law is a technology improvement law, rather than a technology
adoption law, so it’s not directly applicable to adoption rates for EVs.
However, it’s indirectly applicable because the adoption rate of EVs is
highly dependent on technology improvement; specifically, the rate of
improvement of the most expensive (by far) component of EVs — the battery.

Battery costs are already falling rapidly with increased deployment of EVs
and other uses for battery technologies. A recent report from McKinsey &
Company projected “dramatically” falling prices for batteries by 2020 — to
around $200 per kilowatt hour, and $160 by 2025, down from $500-600 at the
time the report was written in 2012, and down from about $1,200 in 2009. A
2013 report from Navigant Consulting agrees in general with the McKinsey
team, projecting $180 by 2020, down from $500 now.

Navigant also projects a more than tenfold increase in EV battery production
by 2020. If we see the same price drop in this area that we have seen with
respect to solar panels — a 20 percent drop with every doubling of
production — we can expect a bit more than three 20 percent price drops
before 2020. This amounts to a net cost reduction of about 55 percent — less
than the drops projected by Navigant and McKinsey, but definitely in the
same ballpark. This quick calculation gives a little more confidence that
these companies’ projections aren’t outlandish.

The battery price reductions bring the cost premium of an EV to only about
$2,000 by 2020, when compared to a comparable conventional auto. This
premium can quickly be made back with fuel savings, due to the cost of
electricity being so much lower than the cost of gasoline, so the total cost
of ownership of EVs will at that point be far less than for conventional
vehicles.

In sum, while we may not be on the road to an inevitable “EV in every
garage” future just yet, due to a number of persistent obstacles, it seems
that we are indeed on the cusp of such inevitability. “Just” seven more
doublings and all cars sold will be EVs.

— Tam Hunt is owner of Community Renewable Solutions, a consultancy and law
firm specializing in community-scale renewables. Community Renewable
Solutions can help developers navigate this complicated field and provide
other development advice relating to interconnection, net metering,
procurement and land use. Click here to read previous columns. The opinions
expressed are his own.
[© Malamute Ventures LLC 2007-2013]
...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Kurzweil#The_Law_of_Accelerating_Returns
Ray Kurzweil
...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accelerating_change#Kurzweil.27s_The_Law_of_Accelerating_Returns
Accelerating change
...
http://www.kurzweilai.net/kurzweils-law-aka-the-law-of-accelerating-returns
Kurzweil’s Law




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