I reckon I've seen the future of electric motoring in the article below. There are multiple complaints and reservations about inbuilt battery life, range limits, costs, and even how inbuilt batteries in military equipment would see them stranded in combat, waiting for a recharge. The battery-swap principle fixes all those problems.
The car only costs $22,000, because you don't have to buy an inbuilt battery with it, you can select the battery size you need for your trip, or for the day.
The battery lease cost is 49,900 yuan (AU$10,725), and there's a monthly battery lease fee of 399 yuan (AU$85), which obviously covers the cost of fully recharged batteries and the swap stations infrastructure costs.
https://thedriven.io/2025/11/10/new-a22000-ev-takes-88-seconds-to-have-a-fully-charged-battery/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42hNpYr-vKs