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this post was submitted on 16 Aug 2023
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Why is the US hesitant to just legally mandate a specific charger like is done in Europe and Oceania with CCS2? I suppose this does help a little bit to remedy the bizarre charging landscape there, though I can't help but wonder if this whole thing could've been avoided...
The CCS system for the US was finalized well after Tesla had a lot of cars on the road, and is pretty inferior to Tesla's NACS and CCS2. It's not a direct comparison to what happened in the EU.
Maybe they were worried about forcing an inferior standard too soon, and wanted to see how the market would play out?
Do you want to be in a lawsuit over standards with, at the time your only 100% EV car manufacturer, and only manufacturer that even thinks its possible to do 100% EVs, over an inferior standard that early on?
The GOP talks nonstop about not doing stuff like that, and the DEMs would be fighting against the only auto manufacturer company fighting climate change and pushing things forward.
The longer the other OEMs dragged their feet, and the more cars Tesla pumped out using NACS probably made the fight harder and harder to have.
Maybe if they did though, they could have pushed Telsa to open theirs much sooner as well though?
It looks like it's happening on its own now as everyone now moves to NACS but ya, it would have been nicer sooner.
Edit: maybe even just talking about forcing a standard could have convinced Tesla to do this sooner as well?