cazalea[Seiko Moderator]
20859
I agree, no amount of cool cars entering the market would quickly change the un-availability of chargers, and the price of electricity
Here's our special electrical rate for EV in the San Diego area. Unless you charge in the middle of the night between midnight and 6 am, the cost is roughly 50-75 cents per kWh. Plus a daily charge of another 75 cents.

With a Tesla battery (most common size) 75 or 100 kWh the electricity cost to charge ranges from $37.50 to $75 which doesn't include any markup by a charging station, cost of real estate, etc.
Yes, you can reduce this cost by having solar but that introduces a whole lot of other issues, including more costs of storage batteries, solar cells, racks and maintenance, etc etc
Solar is far from free. Talking with solar providers in my area (SunRun) -- they would charge me a minimum of $220 a month to barely cover the cost of our home use, not including a car.
That's about the same as I pay for electricity today, including my hybrid car (battery only 14 kWh).