Understanding Anti-EV Myths & Misinformation
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
Environmental psychologist Christian Bretter and his team at the University of Queensland surveyed 4,000 people across four countries to investigate the prevalence of misinformation about electric vehicles. The study found that over a third of respondents agreed with demonstrably false or misleading claims, including that EVs are more prone to fires and emit electromagnetic fields that harm health. Even EV owners held similar beliefs, highlighting the widespread nature of these misconceptions.
💡 Why It Matters
- · The persistence of EV myths underscores the significant challenge to the global transition to sustainable transport.
- · By understanding the root causes of these misconceptions, policymakers and advocates can develop targeted strategies to address the systemic mistrust of elites and conspiracy mentality driving these false beliefs.