https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.
On 2022-08-19, floaterjr <gpgmga@gmail.com> wrote:
https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.
All those people got educations and can't stop writing the stupid 'save our future" crap which is clearly BS to anyone who can do math.
Con Reeder, unhyphenated American <constance@duxmail.com> wrote:
On 2022-08-19, floaterjr <gpgmga@gmail.com> wrote:
https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.
All those people got educations and can't stop writing the stupid 'save our >> future" crap which is clearly BS to anyone who can do math.
There are multiple studies and tools on the environmental costs and
paybacks for EVs that are not political rhetoric.
In general EVs have a higher environmental cost to build and dispose of (which is what you guys are emphasizing) and lower environmental cost to
run, and the question is where is the crossover point. There was a good one
I used a year or so ago that I’m too lazy to look for now where you input your car model and types of fuel used by your electric utility and get how many miles you have to drive it over the lifetime of the car to break even environmentally.
The worst case scenario, a huge lithium battery and a purely coal fired electric utility yielded a payback of around 50k miles. For most of the mainstream models and a normal utility power mix, the payback was 20k miles or less.
They pay back because even with the dirtiest electric utility out there the efficiency of scale of using a utility grid is better than a 30-35%
efficient combustion engine.
There are significant personal benefits as well like charging your car at home every night and not having to visit gas stations, not needing oil changes or emissions tests, etc. I watched this year’s gas price gyrations mainly as an observer.
Btw I agree it isn’t for everyone or for every use case, which is why my primary driver is a PHEV with 50 miles of battery range. What this means in real life is I only use gas on road trips. It’s the best of both worlds, I can go months without buying gas but it’s there for me when I need the range.
On 2022-08-19, floaterjr <gpg...@gmail.com> wrote:
https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.All those people got educations and can't stop writing the stupid 'save our future" crap which is clearly BS to anyone who can do math.
Con Reeder, unhyphenated American <constance@duxmail.com> wrote:
On 2022-08-19, floaterjr <gpgmga@gmail.com> wrote:
https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.
All those people got educations and can't stop writing the
stupid 'save our future" crap which is clearly BS to anyone who
can do math.
There are multiple studies and tools on the environmental costs and
paybacks for EVs that are not political rhetoric.
In general EVs have a higher environmental cost to build and dispose of (which is what you guys are emphasizing) and lower environmental cost to
run,
and the question is where is the crossover point. There was a good one
I used a year or so ago that I’m too lazy to look for now where you input your car model and types of fuel used by your electric utility and get how many miles you have to drive it over the lifetime of the car to break even environmentally.
The worst case scenario, a huge lithium battery and a purely coal fired electric utility yielded a payback of around 50k miles. For most of the mainstream models and a normal utility power mix, the payback was 20k miles or less.
They pay back because even with the dirtiest electric utility out there the efficiency of scale of using a utility grid is better than a 30-35%
efficient combustion engine.
There are significant personal benefits as well like charging your car at home every night and not having to visit gas stations, not needing oil changes or emissions tests, etc. I watched this year’s gas price gyrations mainly as an observer.
Btw I agree it isn’t for everyone or for every use case, which is why my primary driver is a PHEV with 50 miles of battery range. What this means in real life is I only use gas on road trips. It’s the best of both worlds, I can go months without buying gas but it’s there for me when I need the range.
https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.
On 2022-08-19, xyzzy <xyzzy.dude@gmail.com> wrote:
Con Reeder, unhyphenated American <constance@duxmail.com> wrote:
On 2022-08-19, floaterjr <gpgmga@gmail.com> wrote:
https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.
All those people got educations and can't stop writing the
stupid 'save our future" crap which is clearly BS to anyone who
can do math.
There are multiple studies and tools on the environmental costs and
paybacks for EVs that are not political rhetoric.
In general EVs have a higher environmental cost to build and dispose of
(which is what you guys are emphasizing) and lower environmental cost to
run,
If you're assuming wind/solar power and are not addressing the storage problem, that doesn't fully load the cost to run.
and the question is where is the crossover point. There was a good one
I used a year or so ago that I’m too lazy to look for now where you input >> your car model and types of fuel used by your electric utility and get how >> many miles you have to drive it over the lifetime of the car to break even >> environmentally.
I am far from convinced that these studies really account for all the environmental cost, particularly for land use. And I am really not
convinced that they pay attention to the real cost of scale-up. None
of these things have ever survived unsubsidized. Studies are studies,
the real world is the real world.
For an urban commuter, I can see this. For my use profile, that is
worse than useless. One big issue is storage -- I can disconnect
the battery on my gasoline vehicle and put it in storage for 6 months,
no problem. (I have a car in storage at all times.) There are big
problems with doing that for an electic vehicle, including safety
of keeping it in a garage.
But the goal of 100% electric by 2035, powered by wind and solar, is obviously an opium dream.
Con Reeder, unhyphenated American <cons...@duxmail.com> wrote:
On 2022-08-19, xyzzy <xyzzy...@gmail.com> wrote:
Con Reeder, unhyphenated American <cons...@duxmail.com> wrote:
On 2022-08-19, floaterjr <gpg...@gmail.com> wrote:
https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.
All those people got educations and can't stop writing the
stupid 'save our future" crap which is clearly BS to anyone who
can do math.
There are multiple studies and tools on the environmental costs and
paybacks for EVs that are not political rhetoric.
In general EVs have a higher environmental cost to build and dispose of >> (which is what you guys are emphasizing) and lower environmental cost to >> run,
If you're assuming wind/solar power and are not addressing the storage problem, that doesn't fully load the cost to run.
and the question is where is the crossover point. There was a good one
I used a year or so ago that I’m too lazy to look for now where you input
your car model and types of fuel used by your electric utility and get how
many miles you have to drive it over the lifetime of the car to break even
environmentally.
I am far from convinced that these studies really account for all the environmental cost, particularly for land use. And I am really not convinced that they pay attention to the real cost of scale-up. None
of these things have ever survived unsubsidized. Studies are studies,
the real world is the real world.
I was going to argue against your specific points but then I realized your response just boils down to “studies that don’t confirm my priors are obviously flawed even though I haven’t seen them”. You know all these flaws of studies you haven’t seen. I mean you’re attacking a straw man of a
grid powered by green energy when I specifically said that they take into account the actual mix of sources in the grid, or you’re sure they don’t account for energy and environmental losses in the electric grid even
though they are specifically comparing overall grid efficiency with ICE efficiency (which also has a grid with losses, like spills, leaks, refinery leaks and emissions, wellhead gad burn offs, etc)
For an urban commuter, I can see this. For my use profile, that isNo there actually aren’t. The process for storing an EV long term is charge
worse than useless. One big issue is storage -- I can disconnect
the battery on my gasoline vehicle and put it in storage for 6 months,
no problem. (I have a car in storage at all times.) There are big
problems with doing that for an electic vehicle, including safety
of keeping it in a garage.
it to 80%, take it off the charger, and then just like in an ICE vehicle remove or disconnect the 12v battery and put it on a tender. (EVs have 12v batteries for starting (basically closing relays) and powering accessories just like ICE cars). They actually store better because they don’t have gas
to go bad or nearly as many lubricants and rubber hoses to leak or rot.
But the goal of 100% electric by 2035, powered by wind and solar, is obviously an opium dream.Obviously but like I said no one is assuming that in their payback calculations. They are using the energy grid as it exists today.
As far as your concern about battery fires you do know that vehicle fires
in normal ICE vehicles are also a thing, right? You just aren’t attuned to them because they aren’t novel. Just Google “car catches fire in driveway”
and look at all the local news reports, I did and none of them were EVs. Heck my ex-wife’s Ford Explorer had two recalls where they told her to park
it away from any houses until the recalls were done because of the fire hazard (and in one of them the “fix” was to disable the cruise control). --
“I usually skip over your posts because of your disguistng, contrarian, liberal personality.” — Altie
Con Reeder, unhyphenated American <constance@duxmail.com> wrote:
On 2022-08-19, xyzzy <xyzzy.dude@gmail.com> wrote:
Con Reeder, unhyphenated American <constance@duxmail.com> wrote:
On 2022-08-19, floaterjr <gpgmga@gmail.com> wrote:
https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.
All those people got educations and can't stop writing the
stupid 'save our future" crap which is clearly BS to anyone who
can do math.
There are multiple studies and tools on the environmental costs and
paybacks for EVs that are not political rhetoric.
In general EVs have a higher environmental cost to build and dispose of
(which is what you guys are emphasizing) and lower environmental cost to >>> run,
If you're assuming wind/solar power and are not addressing the storage
problem, that doesn't fully load the cost to run.
and the question is where is the crossover point. There was a good one
I used a year or so ago that I’m too lazy to look for now where you input >>> your car model and types of fuel used by your electric utility and get how >>> many miles you have to drive it over the lifetime of the car to break even >>> environmentally.
I am far from convinced that these studies really account for all the
environmental cost, particularly for land use. And I am really not
convinced that they pay attention to the real cost of scale-up. None
of these things have ever survived unsubsidized. Studies are studies,
the real world is the real world.
I was going to argue against your specific points but then I realized your response just boils down to “studies that don’t confirm my priors are obviously flawed even though I haven’t seen them”. You know all these flaws of studies you haven’t seen. I mean you’re attacking a straw man of a
grid powered by green energy when I specifically said that they take into account the actual mix of sources in the grid, or you’re sure they don’t account for energy and environmental losses in the electric grid even
though they are specifically comparing overall grid efficiency with ICE efficiency (which also has a grid with losses, like spills, leaks, refinery leaks and emissions, wellhead gad burn offs, etc)
For an urban commuter, I can see this. For my use profile, that is
worse than useless. One big issue is storage -- I can disconnect
the battery on my gasoline vehicle and put it in storage for 6 months,
no problem. (I have a car in storage at all times.) There are big
problems with doing that for an electic vehicle, including safety
of keeping it in a garage.
No there actually aren’t. The process for storing an EV long term is charge it to 80%, take it off the charger, and then just like in an ICE vehicle remove or disconnect the 12v battery and put it on a tender. (EVs have 12v batteries for starting (basically closing relays) and powering accessories just like ICE cars). They actually store better because they don’t have gas to go bad or nearly as many lubricants and rubber hoses to leak or rot.
But the goal of 100% electric by 2035, powered by wind and solar, is
obviously an opium dream.
Obviously but like I said no one is assuming that in their payback calculations. They are using the energy grid as it exists today.
As far as your concern about battery fires you do know that vehicle fires
in normal ICE vehicles are also a thing, right? You just aren’t attuned to them because they aren’t novel. Just Google “car catches fire in driveway”
and look at all the local news reports, I did and none of them were EVs.
Heck my ex-wife’s Ford Explorer had two recalls where they told her to park it away from any houses until the recalls were done because of the fire hazard (and in one of them the “fix” was to disable the cruise control).
Con Reeder, unhyphenated American <cons...@duxmail.com> wrote:
On 2022-08-19, floaterjr <gpg...@gmail.com> wrote:
https://www.euronews.com/green/2022/02/01/south-america-s-lithium-fields-reveal-the-dark-side-of-our-electric-future
Don't pat yourself on the back just yet.
All those people got educations and can't stop writing the stupid 'save our
future" crap which is clearly BS to anyone who can do math.
There are multiple studies and tools on the environmental costs and
paybacks for EVs that are not political rhetoric.
In general EVs have a higher environmental cost to build and dispose of (which is what you guys are emphasizing) and lower environmental cost to run, and the question is where is the crossover point. There was a good one I used a year or so ago that I’m too lazy to look for now where you input your car model and types of fuel used by your electric utility and get how many miles you have to drive it over the lifetime of the car to break even environmentally.
The worst case scenario, a huge lithium battery and a purely coal fired electric utility yielded a payback of around 50k miles. For most of the mainstream models and a normal utility power mix, the payback was 20k miles or less.
They pay back because even with the dirtiest electric utility out there the efficiency of scale of using a utility grid is better than a 30-35% efficient combustion engine.
There are significant personal benefits as well like charging your car at home every night and not having to visit gas stations, not needing oil changes or emissions tests, etc. I watched this year’s gas price gyrations mainly as an observer.
Btw I agree it isn’t for everyone or for every use case, which is why my primary driver is a PHEV with 50 miles of battery range. What this means in real life is I only use gas on road trips. It’s the best of both worlds, I can go months without buying gas but it’s there for me when I need the range.
--
“I usually skip over your posts because of your disguistng, contrarian, liberal personality.” — Altie
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 403 |
Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
Uptime: | 42:13:48 |
Calls: | 8,407 |
Calls today: | 2 |
Files: | 13,171 |
Messages: | 5,904,913 |