Nice avoidance of the environmental damage battery production and disposal or recycling causes, but it's not on your doorstep so like all the emissions it is not a problem. Out of sight out of mind.
I see you like numbers, reams of them, so here are some simple ones for you:
Fuel tax is 57.95p/l + 20VAT on the top price - a tax on a tax - roughly 66% in total or about 79p/l. Annually about 77bn litres are used for transport bringing in approximately £61bn.
EVs pay no VED but 'normal' cars bring in about £37.7bn for the treasury - all that goes as well.
200,000 charge points, a drop in the ocean for the number of vehicles, will cost the country in the region of £200mn to install. Another cost to us all.
Simple question: How are those annual losses and one off costs to be covered?
I am betting on a few ways. The first is a hike on the price of every unit of electricity regardless of whether it is for driving or heating a home or cooking food. That will not be a vote winner any time soon. Another is Cromwell's price per mile / track and trace, with all the connotations they have for personal liberty. They will go down well in a country that baulks at a simple photo ID card. Then there is VED on EVs, and that could be quite a lot....
EV owners who are currently living the good life on the backs of everyone else are going to find that the cost of running an EV will rise substantially once the La la land version of the raft of subsidies ends.
I am not against EVs, by any means, but I am against all the efforts being put in to a) talk them up as the be all and end all, and b) the refusal to accept that there might be other alternatives or to explain them away as nonsense. I fully expect that in the fullness of time we will have all sorts of alternatives in a similar way that we have petrol and diesel today. And, yes, hydrogen will be one of them.