The streets of Beijing have changed dramatically within just a few years. The noisy, smelly thrum of traffic has been replaced by an unusual quiet for a megacity. Roads course with a stream of mostly electric vehicles, all with their distinct, green license plates.

This is not just a Beijing phenomenon. For those arriving in many of China’s major cities from countries dominated by gas-guzzlers, the quiet will be their first impression, said Li Shuo, director of the China climate hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute.

It’s like stepping into the future, he told CNN.

By any measure, China’s EV growth has been extraordinary. More than half of new cars sold are electric, putting the world’s largest automarket on a path to all but erase gas-powered cars over the coming decades. Last year, China’s EV sales soared to 11 million, a nearly 40% increase on 2023, according to data from UK research firm Rho Motion. It’s an “irreversible transformation,” Shuo said.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 months ago

      Bruh, what’s your public transit solution for folks living outside major metropolitan areas (something the US has in spades)? When someone says small town America think towns with sub 5,000 people.

        • @[email protected]
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          52 months ago

          You’ve never been to rural Japan if you think they primarily use public transport.

          Hell, even in the outskirts of Tokyo most people have cars and drive.

          That said tho, there’s no excuse for urban city centers to not be walkable.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 months ago

          Even in Europe most rural small towns I saw in, say, the Alsace region had a bus line at best but most used cars.

          • scratsearcher 🔍🔮📊🎲
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            2 months ago

            That bus in the countryside is scheduled every hour from my experience? No nice frequencies, especially if you are tired and want to get somewhere.