Ahh, spreadsheets using flawed numbers are my favorite type of anti-EV posting.
When we talk about installing a charger, we are actually talking about installing an EVSE. The CHARGER is built into the car for AC charging (for DC Fast charging, the charger IS the unit at the station). And EVs come with an EVSE plug stock (earlier cars only plugged into a standard 120v outlet for level 1 charging, but newer ones are dual voltage to provide for 240v Level 2 charging). So the install at your home only has to be a standard NEMA 14-50 240v outlet:
Cost can be as little as $100. If you want a dedicated EVSE, like I have, it'll be more money, as the EVSE costs between $300-500 itself, then there's the installation costs. BUT, most electric companies now have rebates for EVSE installation, as do some states and municipalities. As examples, BGE here in Maryland has a $750 rebate towards the installation of an EVSE. My installation cost $780, and I got $750 of that back from BGE. So my total cost for the install was $30. Eversource in CT has a credit for up to $1000 for the cost of an EVSE installation, which means for most customers, it'll be free.
I drive about 1000 miles a month on average and at my electric rate of 10c/kWh, it costs me about $21-24 a month to drive that far. It's as easy to calculate how much of your electric bill is going towards driving as it is calculating how much of your gasoline bill is going towards personal vs business driving. But go ahead and make it harder for yourself. The EV tells you how many kWh it's used so you simply multiply that use by your electric rate and viola, you have how much of your electric bill is dedicated to driving.
As for the statements earlier about no one wanting EVs, that's not true.
https://www.coxautoinc.com/market-insights/q3-2023-ev-sales/
"Electric vehicle (EV) sales volumes set another record in Q3, as total sales of battery-powered vehicles jumped past 300,000 for the first time in the U.S. market. Year-to-date EV sales through September reached just over 873,000, putting the market firmly on track to surpass 1 million for the first time ever.
Total EV sales in Q3, according to an estimate from Kelley Blue Book, hit 313,086, a 49.8% increase from the same period one year ago and an increase from the 298,039 sold in Q2."
Yes, EV sales were up 50% from last year and increasing every quarter. Growth is not exponential, as a couple manufacturers thought, but sales are still growing pretty rapidly.