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Electric Vehicles

Elon Musk.
Politics

Exclusive: Nearly Half of Voters Say Elon Is Turning Them Off Tesla

A new Data for Progress poll provided exclusively to Heatmap shows steep declines in support for the CEO and his business.

Climate

AM Briefing: Tesla’s Musk Problem

On weekend protests, Trump’s new energy council, and Iditarod

Yellow
Electric Vehicles

We Should Be Talking About an EV Tax — But Not This One

The math behind a $1,000 EV fee is specious to say the least.

Blue
Politics

AM Briefing: Clawing Back Climate Grants

On the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, armored EVs, and China’s coal addiction

Yellow
The Los Angeles Wildfires Drained California’s Insurer of Last Resort

AM Briefing: A $1 Billion Bailout

On costly payouts, soaring air travel, and EV sales

Yellow
Has the World Entered a New Era of Warming?

AM Briefing: A New Era of Warming?

On breaching 1.5, NYC’s new EV chargers, and deforestation

Yellow
Electric Vehicles

The EV Tax Credit Has a Looming Paperwork Crisis

Dozens of people are reporting problems claiming the subsidy — and it’s not even Trump’s fault.

A car dealership.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Eric Walker, of Zanesville, Ohio, bought a Ford F-150 Lightning in March of last year. Ironically, Walker designs and manufactures bearings for internal combustion engines for a living. But he drives 70 miles to and from his job, and he was thrilled not to have to pay for gas anymore. “I love it so much. I honestly don’t think I could ever go back to a non-EV,” he told me. “It’s just more fun, more punchy.”

But although he’s saving on gas, Walker recently learned he’d made a major, expensive mistake at the dealership when he bought the truck. The F-150 Lightning qualified for a federal tax credit of $7,500 in 2024. Walker was income-eligible and planned to claim it when he filed his taxes. But his dealership never reported the sale to the Internal Revenue Service, and at the time, Walker had no idea this was required. When he went to submit his tax return recently, it was rejected. Now, it may be too late.

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Electric Vehicles

The Tide Is Turning Against Giant EVs

For now, at least, the math simply doesn’t work. Enter the EREV.

A Ford F-150 Lightning.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Ford, Getty Images</p>

American EVs are caught in a size conundrum.

Over the past three decades, U.S. drivers decided they want tall, roomy crossovers and pickup trucks rather than coupes and sedans. These popular big vehicles looked like the obvious place to electrify as the car companies made their uneasy first moves away from combustion. But hefty vehicles and batteries don’t mix: It takes much, much larger batteries to push long, heavy, aerodynamically unfriendly SUVs and trucks down the road, which can make the prices of the EV versions spiral out of control.

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