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Also robustness vs. power grid destruction. Remember that a hot nuclear war almost certainly means the power grid is gone because of E3 EMP burning out all the transformers, and you can't use local solar either because E1 will destroy photovoltaics. Another Carrington event is another potential issue, although there's no E1 from that and we can probably get most of the transformers unplugged in time to save them.
Trucks are more important than cars in this scenario, but if you live rurally I can see a car still being pretty personally important.
I think that the pipelines are more vulnerable than the grid. The liquid fuel distribution system is quite fragile. And modern cars are terrible maintenance wise - the last real engines were the turbodiesels from the 80s - everything afterwards have too many electrical parts, black boxes and what not to also require a quite fragile distribution chain.
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Trucks are probably the last vehicles to be electrified, though.
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