Electric motorbikes are becoming more & more available. In the test forum, David recently showed an example that probably was less expensive, but most of those bikes are still relatively expensive.
I think this development follows from the idea that electric vehicles do not pollute, do not use energy, and are required to save the planet from an ecological meltdown. Governments (at least here in the EU) actively sponsor electric cars in an effort to promote their use, but the growth in their numbers is still less than hoped for, particularly in some countries. Common perceived downsides are (still) a high price, low autonomy & too few charging stations. For normal commuting the latter 2 are of course no issue.
Technically these electric vehicles are facilitated by the development of much lighter & energy-rich lithium batteries. Conventional batteries are too weak & heavy for normal transport (but were used for vehicles like forklifts). Of course the energy used by the vehicle still needs to be generated somewhere (which still causes pollution), the batteries just store that energy, and feed it to the electric motors as required. Production of those batteries of course also a pollutes.
Since 2019 there is also a MotoE world cup (https://www.motogp.com/en/FIM+Enel+MotoE+World+Cup), in which they are using a bike produced by Energica as a basis https://www.energicamotorusa.com/ (probably enhanced a bit by the teams). In that cup, there are not many races, but in Misano (where the MotoGP is this & previous weekend) they competed, and seeing a race there caused me to look those bikes up. They are very heavy (in excess of 250kg, a MotoGP bike is 157kg dry), and they raced over I believe just 7 laps (MotoGP = 25). Lap times are comparable to those of the Moto3, the 250cc 4T singles (of maybe 80kg? Previously the 125cc 2T's.).
I found all that quite disappointing, yet fully in line with the earlier mentioned common experience. Even the currently most modern batteries are quite heavy, and wanting both strong power and a reasonable autonomy requires you to carry a lot of extra weight, which of course also needs to accelerated & braked.
I think that, in order to be fun, a bike should be light. Only when a next leap in battery technology is made, electric motorbikes become interesting. Any other views?