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I'm actually fine with sabotaging the effective range of gas cars to make EVs slightly more attractive haha
Edit: If a mild opinion like this gets the downvotes wait till you all hear my opinions on car ownership in general lmao
I don't think everyone switching to electric cars is the best possible solution. Think of all the waste, there are plenty of older cars that are in running condition.
Although, maybe if there was a market for affordable electric conversions then that would be best.
Emissions from building a EV is from memory less than the emissions from continuing to run an ICE car after only a few years. And rapid adoption would encourage more renewables into the grid and in homes further increasing the EV advantage.
Would that extend as far as mining, battery construction, and (probably) shipping components around the globe?
Usually these sort of studies include embodied emissions including all of the inputs that go into building the car. This article here: https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/when-do-electric-vehicles-become-cleaner-than-gasoline-cars-2021-06-29/
focuses on new-to-new comparisons, but if you subtract the embodied emissions of around 8M tonnes of CO2 for the model 3, it looks like the break even point using the US electricity supply in 2021 is around 4.5 years. And that is probably a bit conservative given that:
Of course, it also depends on how much the car is used. If you use a used ICE car extremely infrequently the crossover point will be later.
Here's a research article I have gotten around to reading yet but you may find interesting: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S095965262300269X
You might have to go to annas-archive and the like to get the content however.
Nearly 14k miles is a lot for people in some locations. This is more or less what I was talking about. OP was throwing out random (trust me bro) figures, but the numbers I've seen are more nuanced, like these.
My point was basically that I thought their assertions were rather naive. I like the idea of electric, but not necessarily what I've seen out of the tech rn.
I'd also be curious how things worked over the life of the vehicle, and not some arbitrary tipping point early on in the x axis.
Battery replacement is usually going to be far more significant than 14k miles, but will have to happen. A standard carolla or camery can run for fucking ever with modest investment in care. All the care in the world won't protect you against batteries going belly-up.
Lithium batteries are far, far, far more reliable than a Toyota. It's not even a comparison.
How so? I've had Toyotas last me literal decades and hundreds of thousands of miles with minimal maintenance.
I have not encountered a battery in my life with that sort of stamina.
Yeah, after all gas needs to be extracted distilled and shipped around the globe every time you fill up. Only to be burned at 20-30% efficency.
It's efficiently burned, but you only get to use 20-30% of the energy you buy, the rest is wasted as heat.
That isn't the same. I didn't ask about electricity (that would fuel the vehicle). I was pointing out that, among other things, batteries require mining in very specific locations, shipping raw components to where batteries will be built, building them, and shipping them to their destination.
Apples to apples (insofar that it is possible), my dude.
Yeah I know it will barely make a dent. But I think making them just a little tiny bit more attractive is a good thing. Speed up the adoption, cultural acceptance and general acceleration of technology ever so slightly.
What would make it seem more attractive to me, is more safety testing, less consumerism, less ads, less surveillance, less nazis, and less money going to fascists.
Lower price, too.
Oh I'm explicitly not talking about tesla here. But yes, those are all good points that I agree with.
Giving money to fascists includes Toyota/Lexus/Subaru, Ford/Aston Marton/Lincoln/Land Rover/Mazda, GM/Cadillac/Chevrolet/GMC/, Volkswagen/Audi/Porsche/Lamborghini and the other companies that are either donating to fascists directly or are helping them materially in other ways.
Electric cars aren't unattractive because they're electric cars. They're unattractive because they cost 1/4 the cost of my house and come preenshitified with subscriptions. If I could afford an electric car I would get one. Let me know when you see one selling for under $5k.
You can buy a new gas car for $5K?
Polestar exists. Buy used. You can get a great EV for less than 30k regularly and less than 20k depending on your needs and deal shopping.
Those prices are an absolute steal in today’s car market.
Around me,you can buy a Nissan leaf for $4000 without a lot of miles...but this won't last long when people get a clue about EV misinformation.
Holy shit that’s great price.
$20k is still more than I can ever imagine spending on a vehicle. The most expensive vehicle I ever bought was $3k and I really had to think on that one. Until there are +20 year old used electric vehicles for sale, they aren't an option for me. Unfortunately it also looks like they are being built like every other piece of tech and designed to be tossed out every few years so I don't know that +20 year old electric vehicles will ever really exist. Not that new gas engine cars are any different in that way either of course.
I'm referring to the market of people who can already afford one, but choose not to because of various reasons like range, charging speed, politics, charging availability, etc. I never said the only reason they're unattractive is anything specific. But anything that helps them get in the mainstream consciousness will eventually help things like mass production, research, and market share, which will also help price and overall technology improvement speed. $5k electric cars may come in the future but nothing relating to ethanol in gas will directly cause those to appear and before that happens EVs in general need to become more accepted and more adopted.
Comments like this make EVs less attractive. Not the shitty range of EVs, the dipshit attitude of EV owners/fans.
Seriously, go fuck yourself. I’m not trying to buy a new car just because gas all the sudden became less efficient. I’m trying to keep the same vehicle for as long as possible.
You’re either rich, dumb, or don’t pay any bills of your own.
The oil companies are trying to make sure you stay in a metal cage as long as possible