Yep. And also when charging stations are as abundant as gas stations.
I don’t have a gas station at home- but the electric can be charged there. Then again for whatever reason I like overpaying for snacks so I’d still go to the gas station.?
The shift to electric vehicles is going to cause a change in how we do things compared to ICE vehicles. Fueling stops will be a big one.
Right now, you can only put a gas station in certain areas. It has to be big enough for there to be a big underground tank, and the 18 wheeler that fills that tank has to be able to get in and out. Not to mention the environmental engineering that has to be done to make sure the fumes from that tank don't cause problems or leak into the ground water.
Then there's the economic side of it: Given all the rules, regulations and restrictions surrounding gas stations, you have to make the station big enough and with enough pumps to be profitable. The reason there's not a gas station on every corner like there used to be is that a gas station on every corner wouldn't make money and couldn't stay in business.
But when you are talking about electricity - NONE of that applies. All you need for an electric charger is the physical space to park the vehicles and a cable big enough to carry the power needed. No underground storage tank, no Department of Environmental Quality inspections, no room for an 18 wheeler fuel truck to get in there, etc.
So, in theory, there's no reason you couldn't have a couple of EV chargers in every business parking lot. In fact, if I ran a business oriented to travelers, I'd pay money out of my own pocket to get an EV charging station, on the theory that if someone stops to charge their vehicle, there's an excellent chance that they'll be patronizing my restaurant, coffee shop, bookstore, etc.
The cost and complexity of an electric charging station would also be much less than a gas station. It's just a big battery charger, nothing more. All it would need besides power to charge is the ability to connect to a network for billing the user for the power consumed.
Just off the top of my head, it wouldn't surprise me if you could build a 50-car charging station for the cost of a decent sized convenience-store/gas station, especially by the time you get to the point of filing all the environmental paperwork and getting the petroleum equipment inspected.