• The dirty business of saving the planet

    From floaterjr@21:1/5 to All on Fri Aug 19 05:04:46 2022
    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.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Con Reeder, unhyphenated American@21:1/5 to floaterjr on Fri Aug 19 13:46:44 2022
    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.

    --
    If you think nobody cares if you're alive, try missing a couple of
    car payments. -- Earl Wilson

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From xyzzy@21:1/5 to unhyphenated American on Fri Aug 19 14:23:06 2022
    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.

    --
    “I usually skip over your posts because of your disguistng, contrarian, liberal personality.” — Altie

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ken Olson@21:1/5 to xyzzy on Fri Aug 19 12:47:00 2022
    On 8/19/2022 10:23 AM, xyzzy 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, 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.


    This is a big issue in my area. Lots of obtuse ideas. A neighboring
    township to mine is facing recall of 4/5 of their board for not trying
    to keep solar out (which is illegal and will bring lawsuits).

    --
    ÄLSKAR - Fänga Dagen

    Слава Україні та НАТО

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Michael Falkner@21:1/5 to unhyphenated American on Fri Aug 19 11:11:28 2022
    On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 6:46:48 AM UTC-7, Con Reeder, unhyphenated American 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.

    That kind of math lies and I'm living proof. I'd be dead in any real economic, etc. mathematical scenario.

    Mike

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Con Reeder, unhyphenated American@21:1/5 to xyzzy on Fri Aug 19 19:02:23 2022
    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.

    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.

    That sounds unbelievable. But even if it were so, what about the huge infrastructure investment necessary to support those vehicles? What
    provision for the problems with evacuation in a disaster, long trips,
    and blizzards and other long traffic backups? What about battery
    fires? How about capital cost for battery replacement?


    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.

    Electric motors may be 83% efficient, but there are other drains to
    the efficiency of the whole system. Batteries lose charge, lose capacity
    over time, and take time to charge.


    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.

    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.

    I can see a use for some electric and hybrid vehicles. And I can see
    that if we get to plentiful nuclear power, that percentage of use
    could be pretty high and we could significantly reduce CO2 emissions.

    But the goal of 100% electric by 2035, powered by wind and solar, is
    obviously an opium dream. As I said 15 years ago when we talked about
    this, the constant claims of "green power is right around the corner",
    "the smart grid is right around the corner", "solar power is
    increasing in efficiency and producing power at scale is right around
    the corner" is BS. It's fifteen years later, and they can't even prove
    the corner exists yet.

    And the assumption that it will "save the world" doesn't follow from a
    simple efficiency equation. That will require far more than electric
    car technology, and we don't even know that reducing CO2 will make any
    real dent in the climate or whether we're going to get into dangerous territory.

    I have no problem with private companies investing every dollar they
    want to invest. I can choose not to invest in them. I do have a huge
    problem with government subsidies. That extorts money at gunpoint from
    me to support investments I don't think make sense.

    --
    Fast, reliable, cheap. Pick two and we'll talk.
    -- unknown

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From marika@21:1/5 to floaterjr on Fri Aug 19 12:44:00 2022
    On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 7:04:48 AM UTC-5, floaterjr 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.

    Would you feel safer hitchhiking if it were an ev rather than a conventional gas guzzler

    Nice girl and hitchhiking Are generally inconsistent

    If you accepted a ride from an ev, would they still call you a tramp

    I remember this guy my girlfriend really liked and she hitchhiked about two hundred miles

    But his mom disapproved of it and would not let them date

    Would an ev make the ride more respectable?

    Years later he is married to a veterinarian in his department
    I also noticed he was a tub of lard, probably heart attack

    My used to have him and his cousin stay with us overnight, so they could participate in our annual memorial day weekend camping trip

    the old fold out couch in the dining room

    hey overnighted there

    I think my dad was good friends with their dad and hoped one of us would marry either one

    I found neither attractive physically or mentally and i think they thought the same about me

    And also I can't drive

    mk5000


    With deception and lies
    An unconventional mind
    Was your ticket to die
    You may have found--Dot in the Sky
    by Drab Majesty

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From xyzzy@21:1/5 to unhyphenated American on Fri Aug 19 22:08:56 2022
    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).


    --
    “I usually skip over your posts because of your disguistng, contrarian, liberal personality.” — Altie

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From m syadoz@21:1/5 to xyzzy on Fri Aug 19 20:14:22 2022
    On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 5:09:01 PM UTC-5, xyzzy wrote:
    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 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). --
    “I usually skip over your posts because of your disguistng, contrarian, liberal personality.” — Altie

    Maybe the solution is in fixing the pavements rather than the cars

    Seawater-derived cement could decarbonise the concrete industry. Magnesium ions are abundant in seawater, and researchers have found a way to convert these into a magnesium-based cement that soaks up carbon dioxide. The cement industry is currently one
    of the world’s biggest CO2 emitters.

    https://www.scimex.org/newsfeed/seawater-derived-cement-could-decarbonise-the-concrete-industry

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Con Reeder, unhyphenated American@21:1/5 to xyzzy on Sat Aug 20 06:41:43 2022
    On 2022-08-19, xyzzy <xyzzy.dude@gmail.com> wrote:
    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)

    You're assuming that the studies don't merely confirm the researchers priors.
    I can't look at a study that isn't in front of me. I just know we've had such studies for decades, and here we are -- no closer to "saving the world" than
    we were decades ago.


    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).

    The cases I know of, and the ones I see when googling, seem to be the classic rotting-hose-on-hot-engine type. I was more thinking long-term storage in
    the garage.

    I am certainly willing to believe that the problems I have heard of regarding battery life in lithium-ion batteries that aren't used have been solved.

    But again, we haven't gamed out all of these things in real life on any
    sort of scale. The problems we see at 1% of total vehicle count are going
    to be very different than the problems that emerge at 30% vehicle count. We'll solve those as we encounter them -- if we ever do.

    I still see calls for "100% electric vehicles by 2035" and I laugh. That's right around the corner!

    Meanwhile, the Germans are reaping the benefits of their Energiewende, supported by all the best studies. What was the percentage chance in
    those studies of "freeze in the winter and shut off the air
    conditioners in the summer", I wonder?

    --
    An amateur practices until he gets it right. A pro
    practices until he can't get it wrong. -- unknown

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Tim VanWagoner@21:1/5 to xyzzy on Sat Aug 20 06:28:26 2022
    On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 9:23:11 AM UTC-5, xyzzy 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, 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

    Do these analyses ever include the costs of upgrading the grid to be able to support EV? I’ve always seen people say that we have plenty of power generation (or we can add more renewables to the system. But that doesn’t address power transmission
    issues in the US. The majority of homes in the US couldn’t handle adding a single rapid charger (much less pushes to upgrade gas appliances to electric) and that is particularly true of the poor. And that’s just at the end of the line. While you can
    just have your chargers work at night, that doesn’t mean that much in residential areas where A/C or heating still run at night in many areas of the country. So you’re going to have to upgrade the transmission systems in every older residential area
    too. That’s a lot of copper that needs to be mined too. Then there is everything that would need to be done to provide millions of power chargers in apartment complex parking lots.

    The push for all EV in the near future is a rich man’s dream that’s going to be slammed down on the poor.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)