Rolfe
Adult human female
I have to kind of refute this. Snow, overcast skies, dust or anything that obstructs light negatively affects electricity generation. What really doesn't is extreme cold.
Cold temperatures actually increase the efficiency of photovoltaic (PV) cells by reducing electrical resistance and improving voltage output,
There are limits to solar. But I'm afraid you have exaggerated them. I live off grid. I generate all the electricity I need and then some nine to ten months of the year with solar. And I live in Western Washington where cloudy and overcast skies are common, particularly in the winter.
It doesn't make sense for me to buy an EV just yet. The closest commercial charging station is 15 miles away. And a Tesla super charger is 35 miles away. But the day when it does is coming fast.
It's all about electricity storage. Which is getting cheaper and cheaper. For thirty years I've been listening to the right wing bashing solar. But I've watched PV solar go from costing $110 a watt in 1975 to $.20 a watt in 2015. And batteries keep getting cheaper and cheaper as well. The fossil fuel companies are terrified. Their ability to own the energy market has been falling apart.
I have a friend who lives off grid in north-west Scotland. He has a wind turbine as well as solar. He bought an MG4 about the same time I did. His nearest charger is seven miles away and it's not cheap. He says he's still spending less than when he had his diesel car, and on dull windless winter days he simply runs the house from the car battery. His petrol generator has become redundant.