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In Russia’s Wild East, An Electric Car Proves Cheaper Than a Lada

TruckElectric

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In Russia’s Wild East, An Electric Car Proves Cheaper Than a Lada
With Asia literally next door, Khabarovsk benefits from used EV imports and from market forces that make the second-hand plug-ins desirable.
By
Olga Tanas
and
Dina Khrennikova
August 11, 2021, 11:00 PM CDT


Cybercab Robotaxi In Russia’s Wild East, An Electric Car Proves Cheaper Than a Lada 1400x-1

More than a fifth of all electric vehicles imported to Russia between January and May were sold in Khabarovsk and other areas of eastern Russia. Photographer: Getty Images

When Dmitry Unagaev bought his first electric car five years ago, the purchase bewildered friends and neighbors in his hometown of Khabarovsk. But a lot has changed since then. Today, the city in Russia’s Far East is full of battery-powered autos.

“These cars are almost at every turn,” said Unagaev, 31, who owns an auto service shop. Across the city, the vehicles are parked on the streets and in courtyards. People even hang power sockets from their balconies to charge the vehicles, Unagaev said.

More than a fifth of all electric vehicles imported to Russia between January and May were sold in Khabarovsk and other areas of eastern Russia — even though the region claims just 4% of the nation’s population, according to data from the Moscow-based analytical agency Autostat. The country’s capital, home to at least twice as many people, accounted for just 14% of EV sales.

Russia’s so-called Far East isn’t particularly wealthy, nor is it a bastion of environmental awareness. Its embrace of electric cars stems from the unique economics of a region that’s isolated by its sheer distance from the country’s west. Even so, the region offers a glimpse of the trends — more expensive oil, cheaper power, and falling EV ownership costs — that someday could drive widespread adoption of electric models throughout the country and beyond.


Cybercab Robotaxi In Russia’s Wild East, An Electric Car Proves Cheaper Than a Lada Screen Shot 2021-08-12 at 11.59.13 PM


With Asia literally next door, the locals have easy access to cut-price used electric cars imported from Japan. Unagaev’s first battery-powered vehicle was a used Nissan Leaf. Models from 2011 to 2013 typically cost from 400,000-600,000 rubles ($5,500- 8,200), according to ads on a popular car website in Russia. Unagaev eventually upgraded from the Leaf to a second-hand Tesla.


Russia’s Far East also enjoys low-cost electricity, which is subsidized to stimulate economic development in the region. At the same time, due to insufficient local refinery capacity, fuel prices are typically higher than the Russian average — a premium of 6% as of late July, according to the Federal Statistics Service.

The combined market forces are achieving something in this corner of Russia that government policies and technological advances hope to bring about in the rest of the world — making battery-powered cars more affordable than their gas-powered counterparts.

“The main driver is the same all over the world,” said Eugene Tyrtov, senior consultant at Moscow-based Vygon Consulting. “Consumers massively begin to vote with their rubles, euros and dollars for electric cars as soon as they become more economical than traditional cars.”

Cybercab Robotaxi In Russia’s Wild East, An Electric Car Proves Cheaper Than a Lada 1000x-1

The average gasoline expenditure savings from a used Nissan Leaf in Russia’s Far East is about 40,000-50,000 rubles a year, compared with the cost of the domestically-produced Lada Granta.
Photographer: Akio Kon/Bloomberg

The math is simple, said Olga Ivanova, 41, the head of a construction firm in Irkutsk in eastern Siberia. She pays about 500 rubles monthly ($7) for electricity to charge her used EV. Gasoline for her family’s second car costs almost 10,000 rubles a month.

“We calculated, with my husband, that we could save some 200,000 rubles a year” on fuel and the other costs of owning a gasoline car, Ivanova said. “I can’t say that I need money, but when you understand that you can get the same comfort, the same joy and save 200,000 rubles, that’s quite pleasant.”

The average savings from a used Nissan Leaf in Russia’s Far East is about 40,000-50,000 rubles a year, according to Vygon Consulting, compared with the cost of driving a domestically-produced Lada Granta, popularly referred to as the “people’s car.” That’s close to a typical monthly regional salary.

“We also have a gasoline car, but don’t use it a lot as we don’t need to drive large distances,” said Alexey Zhukov, a 28-year-old marketing specialist in Khabarovsk. He bought a used Nissan Leaf earlier this year, following in the footsteps of some relatives.


This microcosm in Russia’s Far East is distinct from the reality in the rest of country. Electric vehicles account for less than 0.2% of the nation’s total passenger-car fleet, according to Vygon. Not surprisingly, the high purchase price of a new EV remains the key obstacle for prospective buyers. That should shift as the cost of EVs — driven by declines in battery prices — drops. The volume-weighted average price for a lithium-ion battery pack was $137 per kilowatt-hour in 2020, down from $1,191/kWh in 2010, according to data from BloombergNEF. And prices will continue to fall, getting below $100/kWh by 2024, a key benchmark for parity with combustion engines, and hitting about $58/kWh in 2030, according to BNEF senior analyst Aleksandra O’Donovan.

“We see EVs costing as much as traditional cars or even less in the late 2020s,” O’Donovan said.

External factors such as the cost of electricity compared with gasoline will depend on government policies, subsidies or carbon markets, which vary greatly in scope and ambition from one country to the next. Still, the proliferation of electric cars, even in small pockets like Khabarovsk, widens exposure to the advantages of the technology that go beyond cost and carbon emissions.

“The dynamics of an electric car, the way it accelerates,” is a bonus on top of the money saved, said Ivanova. “It’s an incomparable feeling.”

Stacy Noblet, a senior director of transportation electrification at ICF, a consultancy in Washington, D.C., said the appeal to consumers will only grow. “EV drivers are sharing their own stories and telling their neighbors,” she said.

Word-of-mouth buzz is gaining momentum throughout Russia. Across online forums, electric-car enthusiasts are spreading the word, doing their best to convince their fellow citizens of the benefits of “passing by gas stations smiling.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...st-an-electric-car-proves-cheaper-than-a-lada
 
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Ogre

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This is true of nearly every remote or 'poor' country: Electricity may or may not be reliable, but it's cheaper than oil.
Plus reliability is higher. For a poor family, a broken down car is a huge financial burden.
 

Crissa

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Yep, cars being giant batteries defeats the actual problem of using electricity in places with an unreliable grid.

And then you have these other remote places that have power, but no place to send it. BEVs then become cheaper due to the fact that it's easier to make way more power than you need than just enough.

-Crissa
 

firsttruck

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Yep, cars being giant batteries defeats the actual problem of using electricity in places with an unreliable grid.

And then you have these other remote places that have power, but no place to send it. BEVs then become cheaper due to the fact that it's easier to make way more power than you need than just enough.

-Crissa

Northeast Russian is like most of Africa in that there is little infrastructure due to vast distances and low population.

In both areas telephone landlines and grid electricity never were prevalent, reliable or complete.

This is why once cell phones became commodities at low prices people in both geographical areas bought enough cell phones that landlines became obsolete before every reaching widespread installation.

Unlike Northeastern Russian, most of Africa gets plentiful direct sunlight and almost every village could generate significant power from solar panels. Most countries do not have domestic oil resources and many that do have oil do not have refineries. So in most countries, gasoline & diesel is expense and expensive to distribute.

Once the world has enough batteries that small BEVs can made for significantly less than ICE, small BEVs might become very common in Africa because of lower purchase cost, higher reliability, fewer parts, lower TCO, lower per mile energy costs and independence of centralized fossil fuel infrastructure.

Rooftop solar & BEVs

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_power_in_Africa
 
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Newton

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p̶r̶i̶u̶s̶ c̶,̶ y̶o̶t̶a̶ p̶i̶c̶k̶u̶p, ⼕丫⻏?尺セ尺ㄩ⼕长
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i picked up a 2012 leaf for 4k, couldnt wait for the CT... pretty amazing little car considering
you can get 10 of them for the price of the base CT. it has about 17kwh of battery left.

it charges from 20% to 80% in like 20 minutes at a chedemo charger. goes about 40 miles with that charge.

being a tinkerer... theres at least 4k worth of batteries, motors, etc.
 
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