In Australia at least all the freight companies just treat the methanol fuel containers as "dangerous goods" - so you pay a bit more to freight them - same category as aerosol cans, boat flares, paint thinners etc.
In real-world usage, most of the battery charging is done by the vehicle, or by the nearest power point; where the Efoy comes into play is when the vehicle isn't being run and you're nowhere near a power point. Then you have three alternatives: Efoy, generator, or solar. If you don't want a generator running, and really who does, then you can still diminish the Efoy usage by employing solar. So in reality, the Efoy might run a few hours a day on and off, or a couple less if you have solar adding to the system. If solar is keeping the batteries charged, the Efoy just sits there doing nothing.
All of which means fuel usage is less than you might think. I've run my entire camp with vehicle battery charger, camper trailer battery charger, two fridges and a freezer, however many lights and whatever stray chargers the kids use, computer, all that stuff, for five days on the Efoy and no solar or generator - used about three litres. If I'd had solar as well, it would have been less.
And yes, US$7K would be about right for the 2200, which is the only thing that stops me getting a second one - it would be nice to have one as a fixture in the trailer, and another in the vehicle for when they're in different places.