Yes. My experiences with EV’s have all been very very good.
My reasoning:
BEVs create no emissions (except indirectly through their creation or some energy production), and do not support the oil industry. Hybrids are a good solution for some people, and help, but they also still create emissions and support the oil industry. They also have the disadvantage of being more complex, since they have both an ICE and en electric motor in one vehicle, and whichever motor is driving the car, needs to pull around the motor that’s not driving the car. They’re good for not having to deal with charging stations on long trips, or for people who can’t easily charge at home (e.g. many people in apartments). And complexity also means more repairs and maintenance, which also indirectly has environmental costs.
Long-term, I expect that even the current BEVs which may get replaced as newer BEVs get better, will tend to still be used for 10–20+ years, as used cars for other people who otherwise would use a car that uses gas. So even if they take a lot to create, I think they’ll be getting used by someone for a long time.
Also, I think that the more BEVs are getting sold and used sooner, the sooner they will replace more and more ICEs being used.
Those last few considerations are I think significant for the environment in the big picture.
Here too are some other articles which offer other contrasting perspectives:
“A Fossil Fuel Economy Requires 535x More Mining Than a Clean Energy Economy”
https://www.distilled.earth/p/a-fossil-fuel-economy-requires-535x
US EPA: “Electric Vehicle Myths”
https://www.epa.gov/greenvehicles/electric-vehicle-myths#Myth2
“UCS Study Shows Lifetime EV Emissions Are 50% Lower Than Conventional Vehicles”
https://cleantechnica.com/2022/07/27/ucs-study-shows-lifetime-ev-emissions-are-50-lower-than-conventional-vehicles/