KX L
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- KX
- Joined
- May 1, 2019
- Threads
- 21
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- 576
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- 782
- Location
- Lake St Louis MO
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- 2017 CVO Street Glide; 2022 JT Mojave with 6MT
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- Retired
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- #1
THIS IS NOT ABOUT POLITICS. PLEASE DON'T TALK ABOUT THE POLITICAL PARTIES. THIS IS AN ACADEMIC QUESTION.
For the life of me I can't understand why supposed environmentalists think electric cars are good for the environment. Please provide academic responses to my thoughts:
Net, [to include hybrids though not as much] I believe EV's take up waaay more energy and do waaay more environmental damage than vehicles with an internal combustion engine [ICE]. While the idea of reducing greenhouse gases is admirable I can't understand the rush of the end state [the vehicles themselves] before the steps required to get there are in place.
Topics: Mining, transportation, manufacturing, transportation, grid electronic requirements, toxic chemicals to dispose of in ? 10 -15 years?
Mining to get the different required precious metals. It's done by huge diesels [most of which are in countries without air standards for them]. More importantly the mining happens in countries that have way worse environmental policies and corruption that we have here. So if you really are an environmentalist you should care about the total costs and the world's environment not just the one where you live.
Transportation costs of the mined raw materials. It happens overland by trucks and railroads, as well as internationally by ships, all of which require huge diesels or some other energy sucking engine which means literally tons of fossil fuels. This is from MoreThanShipping.com:
The average tanker burns 2,623 gallons of diesel fuel per hour. It is said that 22.38 pounds of carbon dioxide are created from burning one gallon of diesel fuel. So, in only one hour, a tanker ship hauling oil to a refinery in the U.S. creates 58,757.5 pounds of CO2 into our atmosphere.Mar 30, 2022
This is from FreightWaves.com with 2018 costs:
How much does it cost to fill a container ship with gas?
With the cost of bunker fuel at $552 per ton, and with fuel consumption of 217 tons per day, a single 28-day round trip voyage for this one vessel would produce a fuel bill of $3,353,952.Jan 22, 2018
Manufacturing costs of using the various factories required to make the vehicle subsystems and put the vehicle together. This part of the stream is probably very close to or actually beats the ICE due to less parts.
More transportation costs by truck, rail, and shipping.
I believe the hugest cost of EV's are the energy costs of keeping the vehicle charged. Our [1st world country] grid can't begin to support EV's though of course the EV manufacturers are saying it can. I'd prefer to listen to the experts.
A Dec 2022 CNBC report says our grid would require 25-50% increase. That's a CNBC report not a Fox news report!
A 2022 U.S. Department of Energy report says the percentage of renewables on the current U.S. grid is 22% in 2022 and is expected to reach 26% by 2024.
The current grid runs mainly on fossil fuels and nuclear energy [approx 20%]. As more renewables come on line there has been more push back due to the unexpected wildlife damages and the usual Not In My Back Yard [NIMBY] lawsuits---which raises the costs. So if the trend continues at a 2% per year increase in renewables we're looking at 12 years just to get to the 50% capability of current requirements. It would be another 12 years to meet only a 25% increase in the future requirements.
Another huge environmental issue [in my peabrain] is what are we going to do with the expended batteries? They're toxic as hell so the costs to make them safe for storage or renewable for further use is completely unknown at the scale of only EV's on sale by 2035.
Puerto Rico's energy grid is 99% on renewable energy. They are in the correct position to move to all electric vehicles---oh wait, the majority of the people can't afford to buy them. General Motors has just reversed it's decision to stop production of the popular [because it's less expensive] Chevy Bolt to manufacture a Chevy Bolt II. They wanted to build just the bigger more expensive EV's but the outcry lead to CEO Mary Barra changing her mind.
So we're running around bragging about our environmental cleanliness and spending tons on subsidies on virtually every component of an EV. It seems to me the money would be much better spent on fixing the start and middle of the EV production stream BEFORE we went the EV path. Please educate me on why I'm wrong.
For the life of me I can't understand why supposed environmentalists think electric cars are good for the environment. Please provide academic responses to my thoughts:
Net, [to include hybrids though not as much] I believe EV's take up waaay more energy and do waaay more environmental damage than vehicles with an internal combustion engine [ICE]. While the idea of reducing greenhouse gases is admirable I can't understand the rush of the end state [the vehicles themselves] before the steps required to get there are in place.
Topics: Mining, transportation, manufacturing, transportation, grid electronic requirements, toxic chemicals to dispose of in ? 10 -15 years?
Mining to get the different required precious metals. It's done by huge diesels [most of which are in countries without air standards for them]. More importantly the mining happens in countries that have way worse environmental policies and corruption that we have here. So if you really are an environmentalist you should care about the total costs and the world's environment not just the one where you live.
Transportation costs of the mined raw materials. It happens overland by trucks and railroads, as well as internationally by ships, all of which require huge diesels or some other energy sucking engine which means literally tons of fossil fuels. This is from MoreThanShipping.com:
The average tanker burns 2,623 gallons of diesel fuel per hour. It is said that 22.38 pounds of carbon dioxide are created from burning one gallon of diesel fuel. So, in only one hour, a tanker ship hauling oil to a refinery in the U.S. creates 58,757.5 pounds of CO2 into our atmosphere.Mar 30, 2022
This is from FreightWaves.com with 2018 costs:
How much does it cost to fill a container ship with gas?
With the cost of bunker fuel at $552 per ton, and with fuel consumption of 217 tons per day, a single 28-day round trip voyage for this one vessel would produce a fuel bill of $3,353,952.Jan 22, 2018
Manufacturing costs of using the various factories required to make the vehicle subsystems and put the vehicle together. This part of the stream is probably very close to or actually beats the ICE due to less parts.
More transportation costs by truck, rail, and shipping.
I believe the hugest cost of EV's are the energy costs of keeping the vehicle charged. Our [1st world country] grid can't begin to support EV's though of course the EV manufacturers are saying it can. I'd prefer to listen to the experts.
A Dec 2022 CNBC report says our grid would require 25-50% increase. That's a CNBC report not a Fox news report!
A 2022 U.S. Department of Energy report says the percentage of renewables on the current U.S. grid is 22% in 2022 and is expected to reach 26% by 2024.
The current grid runs mainly on fossil fuels and nuclear energy [approx 20%]. As more renewables come on line there has been more push back due to the unexpected wildlife damages and the usual Not In My Back Yard [NIMBY] lawsuits---which raises the costs. So if the trend continues at a 2% per year increase in renewables we're looking at 12 years just to get to the 50% capability of current requirements. It would be another 12 years to meet only a 25% increase in the future requirements.
Another huge environmental issue [in my peabrain] is what are we going to do with the expended batteries? They're toxic as hell so the costs to make them safe for storage or renewable for further use is completely unknown at the scale of only EV's on sale by 2035.
Puerto Rico's energy grid is 99% on renewable energy. They are in the correct position to move to all electric vehicles---oh wait, the majority of the people can't afford to buy them. General Motors has just reversed it's decision to stop production of the popular [because it's less expensive] Chevy Bolt to manufacture a Chevy Bolt II. They wanted to build just the bigger more expensive EV's but the outcry lead to CEO Mary Barra changing her mind.
So we're running around bragging about our environmental cleanliness and spending tons on subsidies on virtually every component of an EV. It seems to me the money would be much better spent on fixing the start and middle of the EV production stream BEFORE we went the EV path. Please educate me on why I'm wrong.
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