It's not the short term I worry about...it's the long term. Say 10 or 12 years from now someone damages the front of your car. How difficult will this be to get repaired? Say it needs a new hood?
It's looking like there won't be as many Emira's on the road as Lotus originally planned. How much effort will be put into parts replacements. I realize nobody has a crystal ball. It's just something I wonder about.
Matt said in an interview somewhere (can't remember which one) that they're going to continue building Emiras for a long time, as long as they keep selling. It will be the i4 model, but the body parts are the same as the V6 so there shouldn't be a problem getting a part if you need it. Due to the current backlog of orders, I believe the Emira will continue to be produced for at least the next 10 years or longer. It's going to be the only one of it's kind soon, and it's so gorgeous, it will remain popular enough to stay viable for a long time.
In my personal opinion, the electric future isn't going to be quite as it's being touted to be. Toyota has already said they're not switching their car lines over, they're going to continue producing their ICE vehicles. I believe it was also Ford who has decided to restart an ICE division for particular vehicles.
The biggest problem with the electric future is the world doesn't have enough cobalt or lithium to build a vehicle for everyone who has an ICE vehicle now. This means there won't be enough if any, to build all the replacements batteries 10 years from now. Regardless of ideology, that tends to go out the window the moment reality hits and investors realize everything is about to go "boom". Suddenly things that were supposedly set in stone get changed.
The electric future isn't all that green either, due to what it takes to make the hardware, and then of course there's the issue of generating the electricity to charge all those batteries.
As reality (which is already beginning to set in) gets closer, I think we'll start to see a pushing back of those deadlines, so there will still be the opportunity to build and buy ICE vehicles longer than we're being told now.
I expect hybrid technology to emerge as the go-to solution in the near future. The hybrid approach makes much more sense than just dumping ICE technology completely and switching to electric only. Hybrid uses a lot less of either technology which would greatly extend the usage of said resources, while significantly reducing emissions at the same time. Mazda has an innovative idea about to hit the market, with using a very small rotary engine to primarily charge the batteries for the electric motors so the charge range is extended, as well as off-setting the loss of battery charge in cold climates. It can provide heat in cold climates too, which takes that draining load off the batteries.
As a practical real-world solution, I think hybrid will be the more realistic and affordable technology, which it seems the automotive industry is already beginning to focus on. Electric will still be part of the future, but in a different way than people think at the moment.