No. They've already gone from "impractical eccentric rich person plaything" to "reasonably practical rich person transportation" to "well within the reach of working professionals." Battery chemistry is likely to improve, due to all the work being done on it right now. We're a battery-powered world.
Yes, the Russian agent in the White House may want to make us like we were in the 1800s with coal. In reality, absent the heavy hand of crony capitalism forcing coal down our collective throats, new power plants are far more likely to be natural gas than coal.
I'm not disputing that Tesla has made the first practical electric cars. Also, the US has the largest coal reserves and Russia has the largest natural gas reserves so I'm not sure why Russia would be "forcing coal down our collective throats" unless it's just because we're more averse to strip mining.
Bio-fuels are a non-starter for anything beyond niche use. Biofuels essentially capture solar energy. The best of them are about 2% efficient at that. Crappy solar cells are 10% with good ones closer to 20%. Plus they put out electricity rather than the long complex processing required of bio-fuels.
I'm not talking about growing crops specifically to process into fuel. That is definitely far too inefficient. I'm thinking along the lines of genetically engineered bacteria that can process organic was and turn it into fuel. That's going to take some leaps in technology but I find it more likely than pipe dreams about no more internal combustion engines by 2050.
What is a fad (though a long lived one) is car ownership. Once fully autonomous self driving cars are worked out, ownership of your own vehicle will be on its way out.
That's definitely in the future but still a
long way off. I think that fully self driving cars which can handle driving anywhere a human can are essentially going to require true AI and we're nowhere near there yet.
It will definitely take off in the cites first where the population density make it practical to keep everything mapped, keep construction and accident reports up to date, and where an auto taxi can just drop someone off in front of a building and go on it's way. Out in the country, or even the suburbs self driving cars will face much larger challenges.
I don't think converting all cars to electric is going to happen anytime soon. I think it will take a long time if it happens at all. I sere a more realistic thing as electric vehicles being very common.
My proposition is that something better, like synthetic bio-fuels, or maybe something completely out of left field, will probably replace electrics durn that transition period.
Tldr: price power low when there is excess capacity avoiding the need to build new infrastructure.
Plenty of people are still going to need to charge during the day though. If you own your own house you can install a charging station, plug the car in, and set it to charge in the middle of the night (which will soon stop being off peak when so many people are doing it) but what about people who live in apartments or condos? That would be the majority of city dwellers, where the zero emissions of electrics would be most beneficial.
Unless and until the market is essentially all electric there aren't going to be enough public charging stations in long term parking spaces for everyone to just leave their cars plugged in over night. They'll need to take their cars to a gas station with the equivalent of a Tesla supercharger installed and charge it during the day.
I think you may be missing that electric cars may be seen as the crucial component in changing over fully to renewables. The idea was floated over twenty years ago of using electric cars on charge as a source of power to fill in when the wind stops blowing.
What kind of renewable power are you expecting to take over for primary power generation?