LOL!! EV range not only reduced in cold, ALSO reduced in HEAT!!
And I suggest you talk to firefighters. I have and the consensus is they would rather fight a regular car fire than an EV fire.
Fact: Regular ICE car fires are easier to put out. The firefighters I talked to said it normally takes only 300 - 900 gallons to put out a regular car fire. It took them 9,000+ gallons to put out a Nissan leaf that kept reigniting, and a Tesla took over 6000 gallons. There are some reports that it sometimes takes up 30,000 plus gallons!
Fact: EV fires are less common BUT takes up to 10+ times more effort to put out and are a lot more dangerous. I suggest you do some research on it.
Fact: EV fires can exceed 5000 degrees faranheit, gasoline burns an average of 1600-1900 °F, diesels range at 1700-2200 °F.
For reference an oxy-acetylene welding torch gets up to about 6000 °F, melting point of steel ranges 2370-2800°F.
And then you had GM to recall 68,667 Chevy Bolts
that may or may not catch fire while parked. And even consumer reports even said to park the Bolt outdoors.
Chevrolet Bolt EVs Should Be Parked Outdoors Due to Fire Risk, Government Agency Warns - Consumer Reports
VW had to recall over 100,000 plug in hybrids due to fire risks.
Hybrids are the worst because you have the worst of both worlds.
Firefighters have yet to find a way to put out EV fires effectively, some have developed ways to better fight it but are costly or not quite proven.
Then you have reports of EV's randomly, spontaneously combust inside peoples garages or even cargo containers in ship.
EV fires are more dangerous. Farmington Hills Fire Department hopes new equipment can help
Firefighters Still Aren't Sure How to Quickly Defeat EV Fires
Electric vehicle fires are rare, but challenging to extinguish
Mercedes EQE Loaner Car Burns Down Inside Florida Homeowner's Garage
A California couple's Tesla caught fire while charging overnight, ignited another Tesla next to it, and caused a massive house fire. They haven't been home in 8 months.
If my car catches fire I can likely put it out with a fire extinguisher before it spreads, If I had an EV (I'll never buy L-ion battery car) catch fire its pretty much a lost cause, a fire extinguisher won't do jack to it. (And yes I have a fire extinguisher in my car)