Electric Vehicles' Battery Problem

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 янв 2022
  • Use code WENDOVER16 for up to 16 FREE MEALS + 3 Surprise Gifts across 6 HelloFresh boxes plus free shipping at bit.ly/3ekejvZ
    Watch Extremities at / extremities
    Buy a Wendover Productions t-shirt: standard.tv/collections/wendo...
    Subscribe to Half as Interesting (The other channel from Wendover Productions): / halfasinteresting
    RUclips: / wendoverproductions
    Instagram: / sam.from.wendover
    Twitter: / wendoverpro
    Sponsorship Enquiries: wendover@standard.tv
    Other emails: sam@wendover.productions
    Reddit: / wendoverproductions
    Writing by Sam Denby
    Editing by Alexander Williard
    Animation by Josh Sherrington
    Sound by Graham Haerther
    Thumbnail by Simon Buckmaster
    [1] lighthouse.mq.edu.au/article/...
    [2] www.forbes.com/sites/rrapier/...
    [3] www.statista.com/statistics/2...
    [4] www.spglobal.com/platts/en/ma...
    [5] tradingeconomics.com/commodit...
    [6] tradingeconomics.com/commodit...
    [7] pubs.usgs.gov/periodicals/mcs...
    [8] eplanning.blm.gov/public_proj...
    [9] www.nytimes.com/2021/05/06/bu...
    [10] gbrw.org/wp-content/uploads/20...
    [11] www.sierranevadaally.org/2021...
    [12] thisisreno.com/2021/11/judge-...
    [13] www.statista.com/statistics/2...
    [14] www.spglobal.com/platts/en/ma...
    [15] www.latimes.com/business/stor...
    Select footage courtesy Getty and AP; Select imagery courtesy Geolayers; Select music courtesy Epidemic sound

Комментарии • 9 тыс.

  • @Tapakapa
    @Tapakapa 2 года назад +15864

    One way to cut the growing demand for lithium, cobalt, etc. is massively shifting mobility towards public transport, cycling, and walking in combination with more efficient land use promoting these modes of transport. It's not an easy fix either, but we've known that it works for decades and we have all the technology we need for it, so we can start that shift right now.

    • @mplovecraft
      @mplovecraft 2 года назад +1045

      Your solution is walking?

    • @PakBallandSami
      @PakBallandSami 2 года назад +177

      lol yeah i kinda of agree

    • @JelliThePilot
      @JelliThePilot 2 года назад +1211

      this. car ownership also directly affects economic mobility. its much harder to get ahead in life when you need to put down hundreds or thousands for something that you pretty much need, at least in North America.

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 2 года назад +619

      Good options for many places but just not viable for the US. It's just too big and spread out. Outside of the I-95 corridor on the east coast, population density is surprisingly low.

    • @duailibi2
      @duailibi2 2 года назад +598

      @@wingracer1614 it can still be served by public transportation

  • @wright.boy_
    @wright.boy_ 2 года назад +1923

    The irony of HelloFresh sponsorship is pretty strong here. Every ingredient uses disposable, one-time-use packaging, and each shipment requires another freezer pack and high cost individual shipping. It produced a laughable amount of plastic waste compared to shopping at a grocery store.

    • @ymj4256
      @ymj4256 2 года назад +117

      It's for lazy people
      What do you expect

    • @rhyswilliams4893
      @rhyswilliams4893 2 года назад +155

      Humans love of convenience is gonna be a hard habit to break for sure!

    • @MagicMike_101
      @MagicMike_101 2 года назад +34

      @@ymj4256 let's judge. His comment is valid. Your isn't.

    • @skyhappy
      @skyhappy 2 года назад +14

      If read closely, he's pointing out the irony in the vid. Your comment gave no perspective.

    • @bthemedia
      @bthemedia 2 года назад +16

      That’s why I stopped HelloFresh as well… for PRODUCE food! 🤦‍♂️ at least use compostable bags

  • @AlexBesogonov
    @AlexBesogonov 2 года назад +461

    As for lithium, there's a reason it's found in dry places. It's because lithium salts are dissolved by water, so they get accumulated and concentrated only in dry places.

    • @imalittletoxicjustalittle
      @imalittletoxicjustalittle Год назад +7

      through evaporation i guess?

    • @MrOpenGL
      @MrOpenGL Год назад +32

      @@imalittletoxicjustalittle yes, the rocks are actually called evaporites because of the fact they are "created" via evaporation

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 Год назад

      Don't play into the global warming scam electric death.

    • @MrOpenGL
      @MrOpenGL Год назад +1

      @@ricktd6891 you sound a lot like the guys who used to say electricity kills back in the AC vs DC wars

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 Год назад

      @@MrOpenGL Are you a child? Go learn some science and don't play with electricity. You won't be able to handle it and you might die.

  • @elric58
    @elric58 Год назад +14

    I just read a bunch of the comments and not a single one has mentioned how all these EVs will bring many (or most) power grids to their knees or worse. The infrastructure simply isn't in place to handle the kind of demand charging all of those vehicles will require. California is already begging their citizens to try and charge their EVs in "off" hours so as not to cause brown outs and outages. I can't imagine how things will work when the number of EVs multiplies like they want.

    • @dulguunjargal1199
      @dulguunjargal1199 3 месяца назад +1

      To be fair nearly all of Americas Electric Grid is desperately needing upgrades with most of them being built before the 1970's and haven't seen upgrades for decades.
      But yes EV's will indeed put a strain on yhe Grid but practically everything else can be classified as bringing the Grid a burden without good reason like Adverts on Billboards and Screens and AC Usage

    • @guillaumegiroux9425
      @guillaumegiroux9425 День назад

      EV’s should raise electric costs (by rough zero scientific calculation) of something like 40 kWh per car per day. We could say it would double household electricity consumption (but not industrial consumption).
      Let’s give a rough number, say 70% increase in electric grid usage.
      It is high, but not disqualifying. Solar panels are becoming increasingly prevalent in sunny regions, such as california. Those output those 40 kWh a day. Their growth will cover a big chunk of those 70% increase.
      The flattening of the power usage will be a win for utilities. Energy storage technologies will help. That will reduce waste and lower peak demands.
      I find the grid problem to be lesser than the battery supply chain problem. A notable problem, but fixable.

  • @lewblank7799
    @lewblank7799 2 года назад +1698

    One thing Sam should get tons of credit for is the story organization. This is an INCREDIBLY complex story and he's done a phenomenal job turning it into a well-organized, easy-to-understand story

    • @giths19
      @giths19 2 года назад +23

      also thought provoking I'm siting here questioning my moral line.

    • @TheZachary86
      @TheZachary86 2 года назад +5

      Much better than the CNBC one

    • @compassioncampaigner728
      @compassioncampaigner728 2 года назад +6

      Sam is incapable of doing sub perfection

    • @admiral_waffles533
      @admiral_waffles533 2 года назад +4

      @@liquidKi American problems require American solutions

    • @gernsey7362
      @gernsey7362 2 года назад +1

      agreed, his presentation skills are top notch.

  • @jonathanhall5836
    @jonathanhall5836 2 года назад +2936

    “Artisinal mining” is such a classy way of phrasing forced child labor in unsafe conditions
    Seriously, hats off to whoever came up with that

    • @adamcetinkent
      @adamcetinkent 2 года назад +106

      Those child slaves are _artisans_!

    • @JackieWelles
      @JackieWelles 2 года назад +96

      Artisinal doesn mean "forced child labor", it means something is made in traditional or non mechanized way. Pay attention to a word " traditional ", child labor in mines there common thing for hundreds maybe even thousands of years. It has to stop obviously, but it doesn't mean that anything named Artisinal includes child labor.

    • @AlexG-wk3nh
      @AlexG-wk3nh 2 года назад +154

      @@JackieWelles he didn’t state that it did. He implied that they have misused the term and been creative in their use of the term

    • @JackieWelles
      @JackieWelles 2 года назад +45

      @@AlexG-wk3nh Even so, the term they use is not wrong. Child labor is much bigger problem because its not just about mining, those families don't have enough money or chances to earn money anywhere else. This is often not some forced labor rather people not having a choice and I blame governments who allow people to fall that far!

    • @CykoruKun
      @CykoruKun 2 года назад +32

      In my country there's an issue where people mine for coal in makeshift shafts. Of course it is totally black market with lots of injuries and deaths. The word for it translates directly in english to "Poverty Shafts". Good to know we can now call them artisans, or maybe craft coal?

  • @hugos4355
    @hugos4355 Год назад +99

    no one's talking about the radon gas that gets kicked up from the mines/ground from the drilling for lithium, and the green acid sludge that companies let sit at mining sites from the extraction process left to percolate and destroy ground water and lakes and streams cause no one wants to deal with that stuff or rather have no solution to that huge waste problem

    • @joebrandon1730
      @joebrandon1730 Год назад

      It's almost like this fake green revolution is worse for the environment than our gas cars...cars that only account for 16% of the world's C02 production.

    • @jimvj5897
      @jimvj5897 Год назад

      Radon is produced by the decay of radioactive elements (U, Th, etc) in the earth's crust.
      It seeps out EVERYWHERE. Doesn't matter whether you dig or not.
      It also has a very short half life (~3.8 days).
      It becomes a problem in CLOSED rooms, not out in the open (like open pit mines).

    • @RogerMiller-td5yc
      @RogerMiller-td5yc 8 месяцев назад +1

      Well its almost like people believe that they care about the planet, or ther people.

    • @ThomasLee123
      @ThomasLee123 6 месяцев назад +3

      SO TRUE. THESE GUYS LIE LIKE A RUG.

  • @conorh5697
    @conorh5697 Год назад +560

    Laughed out loud at the sponsor at the end of the video being Hello Fresh. After 20 minutes of green talk, a sponsorship from a company that packages each tiny ingredient in plastic, then ships it to you? I know that the creator is smart enough to know that this plastic is indeed not 'recyclable'.

    • @VitaeLibra
      @VitaeLibra Год назад +37

      Sponsorships make the algorithm go round

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 Год назад

      The global warming scam is nothing but environmental damage and animal and human genocide.

    • @VitaeLibra
      @VitaeLibra Год назад +5

      @@ricktd6891 You're saying it's all fake? As opposed to companies wanting you to believe it's fake so they can keep doing what they've always done

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 Год назад

      @@VitaeLibra The problem with what you're saying is you're assuming what they said is true and CO2 is some kind of pollution and therefore companies have been polluting the planet with it. That's the opposite of the truth. Atmospheric CO2 is not pollution, it's plant food and there's TOO LITTLE in the atmosphere, not too much. Life thrived in 7000 PPM and there was no catastrophic global warming.

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 Год назад +1

      @@VitaeLibra The dangerous level of atmospheric CO2 we're closets to is 150 PPM, at which point all plants die, all animals die, we all die. At 1200 PPM to 1600 PPM we all live and plants thrive and there's more food on the planet, not less. The Earth is actually historically cold right now too, not historically hot. Want to see it? Search : "Global temperature and atmospheric CO2 over geologic time/graph/images."

  • @SkylarsTerribleMemes
    @SkylarsTerribleMemes 2 года назад +2934

    of course, hellofresh will help me reduce my impact on the environment by packing literally everything in an absurd amount of plastic.

    • @NONO-hz4vo
      @NONO-hz4vo 2 года назад +428

      Yeah this sponsorship doesn't add up. There are far more economic and environmental friendly options than this.

    • @tacct1kk715
      @tacct1kk715 2 года назад +19

      Lmaoo that's true😂

    • @NickQtasi
      @NickQtasi 2 года назад +6

      @@hiiamelecktro4985 paypal me 3000£

    • @chikitronrx0
      @chikitronrx0 2 года назад +63

      Yeah. Almost all the green marketing are worse.

    • @Esquif100
      @Esquif100 2 года назад +93

      What's worse is he blatantly declares it as a way to decrease your emissions. This is shameful. The guy is just a fucking sellout.

  • @loowyatt6463
    @loowyatt6463 2 года назад +2099

    I am a geologist and every time I say this to someone who's on about electric cars will fix everything... The issue is more how much we are using raw materials not what we are using... We reached peak mining in 1980s for most raw material, every years it's getting more and more expensive to mine these resources... Sadly our entire economic system is measured by growth which can only be fulfilled by more mining more resources

    • @RetroDawn
      @RetroDawn 2 года назад +180

      Yes, that's the key problem. Continuous growth required by our monetary system.

    • @MJ-uk6lu
      @MJ-uk6lu 2 года назад +16

      You can always expand in services, pretty much what Japan did.

    • @mrb152
      @mrb152 2 года назад +47

      MJ japans population is shrinking. By 2050 there will 25% smaller population there.

    • @weldin
      @weldin 2 года назад +138

      @@MJ-uk6lu You mean like a service economy? How does that fix anything? Service economies rely on industrial and manufacturing economies for their equipment, supplies, etc..

    • @wolf3755
      @wolf3755 2 года назад +17

      Hydrogen must be the answer then

  • @TubersAndPotatoes
    @TubersAndPotatoes 2 года назад +330

    How reusable/recyclable are the batteries after their end of life?
    100% lithium recovery?
    50% recovery?
    Are we going to be facing a massive pollution problem from these batteries being tossed in landfills or storage like with plastic bottles, used solar panels, used wind turbines?

    • @kaelanbirks8780
      @kaelanbirks8780 Год назад +59

      They are 98% recyclable, the remaining 2% is just some plastic which we hopefully will also be able to recycle one day

    • @SmokeElectronics
      @SmokeElectronics Год назад +171

      Yes and no. By hand they can be disassembled and used to make more batteries. But 95% of lithium batteries go to the landfill. It costs less to make batteries from new. The nickel and cadmium are extracted but that is all. What you should really be worried about is water. Contaminating and pumping 500,000 gallons of water per ton of lithium is an environmental disaster on a global scale. That alone should halt this ev market in it's tracks

    • @mrjohnnyk
      @mrjohnnyk Год назад +54

      Due to the nature of the recycling methods, it would actually generate more carbon emissions to recycle them than it would take to make new batteries.

    • @spacetoast7783
      @spacetoast7783 Год назад +23

      @@SmokeElectronics It makes sense that tiny batteries in small electronics aren't recycled, but the amount of recyclable material in an EV is enormous. Tossing it in a landfill tossing out profit.

    • @_perza
      @_perza Год назад +48

      Europe might be banning Lithium due to this. They are horrible for the environment, which is a reason why solar panels and wind turbines are bad for the environment (and why nuclear is the way to go)

  • @miquelgorbivi7702
    @miquelgorbivi7702 Год назад +8

    Very good segment, only thing missing here is the discussion of waste with the lack of recycling technology.

  • @yellajosyulaprabhat
    @yellajosyulaprabhat 2 года назад +853

    "How much bad should be allowed for the greater good?" The question with which this video ends is not only applicable for EVs but for a lot of things. That is such a powerful question.

    • @MrJdmcd3
      @MrJdmcd3 2 года назад +41

      utilitarian ethics is all about this.

    • @dropit7694
      @dropit7694 2 года назад +9

      This implies that there is no existence or reduction in badness in the world. Aren't we as consumers committing bad deeds every day by the way we consume and by how much?

    • @panchor
      @panchor 2 года назад +12

      Nagasaki and Hiroshima were bad allowed for the greater good, you like or not.

    • @TKUA11
      @TKUA11 2 года назад +20

      Yeah, forcing tree huggers to make difficult decisions makes this conflict so much more interesting

    • @talalzahid2241
      @talalzahid2241 2 года назад +2

      Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice

  • @savvapouroullis7927
    @savvapouroullis7927 2 года назад +905

    Very well said. I'm in the mining industry and I often tell friends that there is no such thing as ethical cobalt, and that the massive battery boom is going to be powered by unethical mining in central Africa. People tend to not register or believe me. It's just too inconvenient to admit that almost everything about our 21st century lifestyle is made possible by child labour in the DRC, and too easy to ignore unfortunately.

    • @lukasfiala1019
      @lukasfiala1019 2 года назад +24

      Is it really better with oil? I mean, sure, there is oil produced in the U.S. or Norway, but a large portion of the world's supply comes from oppressive, non-democratic regimes with little regard to environmental impact.

    • @wellingtonaviationchannel634
      @wellingtonaviationchannel634 2 года назад +37

      @@lukasfiala1019 The global south needs to be able to nationalize its oil and lithium (i.e. Bolivia) to allow the profits from that mining to develop the country, rather then for the enrichment of a few corrupt, local politicians and western capitalists.

    • @sllgrecco
      @sllgrecco 2 года назад +20

      @@wellingtonaviationchannel634 yes, just like Venezuela did... now all the oil profits are going to develop the country, not to Maduro pockets

    • @wellingtonaviationchannel634
      @wellingtonaviationchannel634 2 года назад +23

      @@sllgrecco Before oil nationalization, Venezuelas oil was being funneled offshore to American oil companies. After nationalization the money was funded into Venezuelan social programs to feed the poor, until the US slapped 155+ sanctions on them starving their economy.

    • @sllgrecco
      @sllgrecco 2 года назад +21

      @@wellingtonaviationchannel634 Venezuela was the richest south american country before Chavez. By the way, Bolivia already nationalized his oil production years ago, no poor saw it's profits.

  • @kittycat8685
    @kittycat8685 Год назад +8

    The Hello Fresh ad at the end is truly ironic

  • @cliffm8846
    @cliffm8846 7 месяцев назад +15

    Folks, if you like peace of mind about your battery (longevity & safety), for years to come, just charge your EV between 30% - 70% (and do 90% - 100% when going for a long Road Trip).
    (I own Tesla S & X, and I'm an Electrical Engineer)
    * High temperatures kill batteries. If you go on a holiday/vacation during the summer, leave your vehicle at a low SOC (state of charge). For example, at or below 30% SOC
    * Cycle within a narrow SOC range. For example: 40-60% rather than 10-80%. The cathode expands and contracts in a wider SOC range, which causes it to break apart.
    * On that note: The lower the narrower the SOC range, the better. That means charging frequently.
    * Avoid charging the vehicle above 75% SOC. Above 75% side reactions start occuring that cause degradation. This also reduces the volume expansion issues mentioned
    * Taking all variables into account, operating between 45-70% SOC, and storage at ~30% is ideal.
    * Occasional high SOC and wide SOC range are okay! For example, the occasional road trip.
    * With good thermal management hardware and battery management software, supercharging should have minimal negative effects on cycle life
    But even y'all will not follow those tips. The battery will not die tomorrow. it is just that there are some small (or big) consequences later on.
    Have a great day

    • @ClearGalaxies
      @ClearGalaxies 4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks! I just wish these were software options in all consumer battery electronics. (But that wouldn't be very profitable)

    • @cliffm8846
      @cliffm8846 4 месяца назад +2

      @@ClearGalaxies
      That's absolutely 100% correct!

  • @profanegaming2829
    @profanegaming2829 2 года назад +688

    Ok with all due respect, Hello Fresh being more eco-friendly? Individually shipping individually wrapped and contained meals to homes... there may be less food waste but I'm more than skeptical about their overall impact being lower than traditional ways of obtaining groceries.

    • @intan4722
      @intan4722 2 года назад +63

      Thing is, produce at the store also uses a lot of packaging. Ever buy a lot of eggs, like multiple dozen? Fruits come into the store like that, in a cardboard box, individually separated by more cardboard, sometimes in foam sleeves. Workers take them out of there before putting them on display. I don’t know if that outweighs how much Hello Fresh does, I’m just saying there’s hidden costs that you might no be considering.

    • @Strafprozessordnung
      @Strafprozessordnung 2 года назад +42

      @@intan4722 what? I used to work in food logistics as a supervisor and have never seen that apart from ecologically produced fruit for the rich and pretentious.

    • @adrianthoroughgood1191
      @adrianthoroughgood1191 2 года назад +34

      Have you ever actually tried hello fresh? The amount of extra plastic is very small. The meals come in recycled paper bags with the whole thing in a recycled cardboard box. The vegetables have less packaging than you often get in the supermarket. Where you do get extra is in the small ingredients like you get a sachet of vinegar rather than using some out if a bottle. But overall the quantity of plastic is not much higher. The meals aren't shipped individually you get one delivery a week which is no different than most people would do driving to the supermarket anyway.

    • @Strafprozessordnung
      @Strafprozessordnung 2 года назад +25

      @@adrianthoroughgood1191 what the f* kinda vegetables you people buy that comes with packaging. Its vegetables.

    • @ha231
      @ha231 2 года назад +40

      @@Strafprozessordnung ? Do you buy all your vegetables from local farmers markets only and expect that's how it works everywhere on the planet? Because unfortunately it doesn't. People buy bags of potatoes, carrots and onions... Strawberries, blueberries, mushrooms etc all come in plastic boxes. Even when picking your own produce, you're given plastic bags to put them in to weigh. For someone working in "food logistics" you sound weirdly clueless about how much plastic is everywhere.

  • @sebdude100
    @sebdude100 2 года назад +923

    Great video as always, however you did made one mistake concerning solid state batteries, they will mostly likely not decrease the usage of the mentioned metals. This is due to a mixup between energy density and energy content. As of now the energy content (so capacity) defining part of a battery is the cathode. So for an imaginary battery pack with 100 kWh of standard lithium ion batteries one needs at least the same amount of cathode as for a 100 kWh battery pack of solid state batteries (even if there is a significant weight difference between the batteries, explaining the different energy density). The difference then is in the anode and the electrolyte, for state of the art batteries a mix of silicon and graphite is used as anode and a solution of usually lithium hexaflourophosphate in organic solvents is used as electrolyte, while in the case of for example Quantumscape Lithium metal is planned to be used as anode and a ceramic made up out of Lithium, Lanthanum, Zirconium and Oxygen will be used as electrolyte. So for most solid state batteries there will be more lithium required per kWh! Better solutions for alleviating the problem of metal demand however do exist, for example LFP cathodes, which require Lithium but no Nickelr or Cobalt (as used by Tesla in their standard range Model Y and 3) or Sodium-Ion batteries (not as much industrialized and applicability for EVs not proven, but in the product pipeline of CATL). But again otherwise great video, more people need to be educated on the ramifications of the required electrification of the mobility sector.

    • @Ben.N
      @Ben.N 2 года назад +5

      Hmm

    • @jonhanson8925
      @jonhanson8925 2 года назад +32

      Watching the section on solid state I kept wondering "what are solid state batteries made out of?"

    • @kingofurukgilgamesh7828
      @kingofurukgilgamesh7828 2 года назад +9

      With solid state battery, you will need a little less energy content for the same range, because you will be carrying less battery with you. So you can reduce Co and Ni (not Li though).
      But I think LFP is the future.

    • @sebdude100
      @sebdude100 2 года назад +9

      @@jonhanson8925 Basically the same materials can be used for Anode and Cathode as for conventional batteries. So for cathode we have the typical NMC/NCA and LFP materials, but it is also possible to use other materials like Vanadium oxide, but a lot of additional R&D is required to commercialize those, which is unlikely considering the available materials. At the anode side we have the main reason for the higher energy density of solid state batteries, due to less chemical reactions at the anode-electrolyte interface Lithium metal can more easily be used, which boosts the energy density tremendously ( Graphite has a capacity of ~370 mAh/g while Lithium has 3860 mAh/g). The biggest promise however is to use only the copper current collector as the anode, on which the Lithium from the NMC deposits during charging, omitting the anode material completely would of course be a huge plus for the energy density (and eliminate material use and thus cost). But as you probably can imagine this is rather hard to accomplish outside the lab. Where the biggest difference is, is of course the electrolyte and separator. Here the solid electrolyte acts at the same time as a separator, so no need for that. As materials there are three main classes: ceramics (like the LLZO from Quantumscape), sulfidic (Don't know from top of my head which company uses those but they often consist of Lithium, sulfur, phosphor and some other materials) and lastly there are organic, polymer type electrolytes (do not have an example right now), those are already commercialized by blue solutions. However all have their problems, e.g. the blue solution batteries need to be heated to ~60°C to have sufficient conductivity for the Li ions.

    • @sebdude100
      @sebdude100 2 года назад +1

      @@kingofurukgilgamesh7828 Yeah you are completely right, one would require a smaller battery for the same range due to the reduced weight, but i have no idea how strong that impact would be

  • @apokalypz08
    @apokalypz08 Год назад +13

    Curious, did you review how PCB's are made for the electronics and how many times those parts are shipped back and forth across the world before being final assembled and in the end use device??

  • @Bonanno13
    @Bonanno13 Год назад +10

    Excellent reporting, excellent presentation. I am going to cite this in my research essay on electric vehicles. Thanks folks!

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 Год назад

      Write about the genocide the global warming scam is causing instead. Write about the child slave labor used in mining minerals for the batteries too.

    • @claudiodelbalzomoreno2860
      @claudiodelbalzomoreno2860 Год назад +4

      Did you get to address how are the batteries disposed of once they finish their life cycle? Because this video didn't cover that.

  • @nikhilgala
    @nikhilgala 2 года назад +694

    Wendover Productions: "How much Bad should be allowed for the Greater Good ?"
    This is by far the simplest way someone has described the issue the modern world is grappled by!
    Great video, once again 🙌🏻

    • @kcgunesq
      @kcgunesq 2 года назад +15

      No it isn't, its tripe. Who's greater good? What type of bad? A lot of a little bad or a lot of a very bad? As always, it will generally be settled by who has more money. When that fails, it will be solved by who has a larger military or at least, who is more willing to send soldiers to die.

    • @CleverAccountName303
      @CleverAccountName303 2 года назад +24

      Unfortunately, this question is never answered by Society. It is answered by Money.

    • @TheJttv
      @TheJttv 2 года назад

      "nuance"

    • @cccycling5835
      @cccycling5835 2 года назад +15

      It’s literally scarcity economics. There are no solutions, only compromises.

    • @CleverAccountName303
      @CleverAccountName303 2 года назад +3

      @@cccycling5835 lithium, coal, oil, solar radiation, wind. None of these are scarce.

  • @Explodingstrawberry125
    @Explodingstrawberry125 2 года назад +1250

    "how much bad should be allowed for the greater good" damn that hit hard

    • @rustybollocks3827
      @rustybollocks3827 2 года назад +29

      I hate to tell you kid, that's the way the world works.

    • @josedorsaith5261
      @josedorsaith5261 2 года назад +3

      It's creepy

    • @Industrialitis
      @Industrialitis 2 года назад +35

      @@splitloopgaming3523 That's a bad take away. The point is there are always unintended or undesirable consequences for every choice, no matter how well intended.

    • @daviddavis1322
      @daviddavis1322 2 года назад +3

      Very Machiavellian

    • @tensevo
      @tensevo 2 года назад +3

      the age old doctrine of "the ends justify the means"
      (no matter how murderous the regime is, it will be worth it for the greater good)
      Cultural Marxism

  • @johnsonp.
    @johnsonp. 2 года назад +12

    I love how the nearest Starbucks is a measure of sparseness.

    • @Scott_From_Maine
      @Scott_From_Maine Год назад +1

      I'd say being three hours from a Starbuck's is a feature, not a bug!

  • @MrLombardi
    @MrLombardi Год назад +29

    I think to date Volvo is the only car manufacturer to have valid data to show the actual affects of producing an ev version model of an ide identical model of its combustion counterpart on the same production line. And I think the studies may come to a great shock as to how much we still have to go in EV cars to even consider them viable comparison in purely just the production of them being "greener" then the combustion versions.

    • @tomr6955
      @tomr6955 9 месяцев назад +2

      It's quite obvious there is a ways to go.
      Unfortunately the masses are brainwashed.

    • @charlescarmichael1124
      @charlescarmichael1124 8 месяцев назад

      I wonder what will happen when the “brainwashed” start driving these things for awhile and wake up to the reality that they can’t compete with a real car. All the sudden the market is flooded with used Ev’s no one will buy…

    • @ThomasLee123
      @ThomasLee123 6 месяцев назад +1

      WHO IN THE HECK IS GOING TO BUY A 5 TON TOYOTA?

    • @ClearGalaxies
      @ClearGalaxies 4 месяца назад

      I don't know what you said but I agree

  • @TimeBucks
    @TimeBucks 2 года назад +1117

    Well done Sam and team

    • @bthemedia
      @bthemedia 2 года назад +1

      Also… BIGGEST problem with Lithium batteries 🔋 🤔 🧐
      = Not recyclable! ♻️🔥🗑

    • @markxkovacic
      @markxkovacic 2 года назад +6

      @@bthemedia Not true.

    • @Gellis12
      @Gellis12 2 года назад +1

      @TransitNerd the issue with fuel cells is that they're only between 25-50% as efficient as just using a battery to store the energy

    • @BeautifulPeopleBTFLPPL
      @BeautifulPeopleBTFLPPL 2 года назад +1

      Nuclear Diamond Battery That Will Run For 28,000 Years. . A world without chargers .
      ruclips.net/video/FHfs3_7Q7FA/видео.html

  • @noisycarlos
    @noisycarlos 2 года назад +721

    Another option to reduce our dependency on lithium is to use smaller vehicles that need smaller batteries. If there was better bike infrastructure, more people could bike to work and do errands. eBikes and eScooters use batteries that are 100 300 times smaller than EVs. Not everybody would like or is able to switch for various reasons, and that's fine. We just need to make micro mobility a viable alternative so people can have a real choice.

    • @JayVal90
      @JayVal90 2 года назад +12

      Why not just apply that logic to existing vehicles? Oil drilling doesn’t require this kind of environmental damage.

    • @rustyslug2943
      @rustyslug2943 2 года назад +90

      eBikes and eScooters have an even more carbon efficient version. Bikes and Scooters.

    • @noisycarlos
      @noisycarlos 2 года назад +19

      @@JayVal90 it would definitely help. The only issue is that gas-powered bikes and scooters can be very polluting due to more relaxed environmental rules for them, also they're really loud even vs gas cars. Manual bikes are good but not everyone can or is willing to sweat to go to work. eBikes and scooters seem to be the best of both worlds with no emissions and little to no sweat (unless you want to)

    • @lorenzo_br5803
      @lorenzo_br5803 2 года назад +6

      @@rustyslug2943 Bikes, yes, but not scooters. Escooters are, like electric cars, better than ICE ones. The expansion of production is difficult, but wouldn’t be required to such a scae with smaller batteries.

    • @noisycarlos
      @noisycarlos 2 года назад +8

      @@rustyslug2943 agreed. But not everybody wants or can use manual bikes/scooters for a multi-mile trip. If it's for transportation we want as many people as possible using them including grandmas, and people out of shape (like me). The good news is that they both use the same infrastructure so advancements for one help the other

  • @rajos2945
    @rajos2945 10 месяцев назад +6

    this was genuinely one of the best videos i've ever seen on youtube. reminded me why i studied engineering!

  • @GrantMFletcher
    @GrantMFletcher Год назад

    I live down the road from Greenbushes. Have a few mates that work there. Great explanation!

  • @smcic
    @smcic 2 года назад +627

    I bought an electric bicycle to see if it was feasible to commute to work with it. And not only was it feasible, it was very easy and saved me thousands of dollars and time over a year. I think the answer is that more people need to avoid using cars as much as they can.

    • @dextrodus
      @dextrodus 2 года назад +110

      I agree, and city planning can do a lot towards those goals, making it more comfortable even for the fewer drivers that can't choose to use a bike for example because of their payload .

    • @G33K177
      @G33K177 2 года назад +36

      Hell yeah we need more bike paths!

    • @noahroth2992
      @noahroth2992 2 года назад +54

      @@dextrodus Dutch cities are very good at this. A channel called Not Just Bikes has a lot of videos on the topic, and I really hope more cities throughout the world adopt this strategy.

    • @mrb152
      @mrb152 2 года назад +31

      It’s -20f with windchill where I am. Definitely not feasible.

    • @TKUA11
      @TKUA11 2 года назад +30

      Good for you, we’re not all rich like you that we can afford to not drive cars. Don’t let rich coastal elites make expensive decisions for you. Most of us can’t ride your tricycle to work as we live in cheaper areas away from city center

  • @oliverbanks3396
    @oliverbanks3396 2 года назад +480

    Correction: the UK will ban the sale of NEW internal combustion vehicles. The second hand market will be unaffected and if prices do not decrease most people will simply buy a second hand petrol or diesel...

    • @deandrethompson5341
      @deandrethompson5341 2 года назад +56

      Get ready for new taxes on used ICE vehicles that will discourage ownership, or they’ll simply pass a mandate to ban all ICE vehicles…

    • @thetaomega7816
      @thetaomega7816 2 года назад +48

      @@deandrethompson5341 they dont need to, they will break at some point and gasoline will not be available everywhere anymore

    • @japopo5533
      @japopo5533 2 года назад +50

      And then how do they expect all those people to be able to afford a brand new electric car when the values of all of their gas and diesel vehicles fall through the floor that they would need to sell to be able to afford a new vehicle 🤔

    • @Zebrahead6000
      @Zebrahead6000 2 года назад +21

      Watch the price of those skyrocket though. Same with fuel. It's going to be rough on the citizens.

    • @valdimareiriksson101
      @valdimareiriksson101 2 года назад +15

      @@japopo5533 ever heard of second hand EVs ? I swear it's a thing.........

  • @leftrevolution7
    @leftrevolution7 Год назад +14

    The matter: electric transportation is a subject I find really interesting. It all started with;
    if everybody have an electric car, What does it mean to recharge?
    Questions linked to this;
    - Duration when a car is fully charge?
    - Distance to travel with a fully charged car.
    - International transport.
    - Mail (international)
    - Replacement of batteries in ev's.
    - Gas stations
    - recharge stations?
    - From where comes the electricity to recharge stations?
    Personally I think that especially the European union, severely underestimate their goal;
    In the year 2035, only ev's are allowed.
    If the questions above aren't thoroughly studied, I foresee enormous problems.
    Resulting in a crisis unheard of. In this case, forcefully created by a union of nations.

    • @bellairefondren7389
      @bellairefondren7389 Год назад +3

      We should take a step back and ask: why does everybody need an electric car?
      Is there a from of transportation that can reduce our need for cars; like the EU's already mature transit system?

    • @leftrevolution7
      @leftrevolution7 Год назад

      @@bellairefondren7389
      From time to time, this is mentioned and often returns. An issue is that companies, jobs and schools don't begin and end at the same time. Then there is the number of people that works, go to a school. One company consists of ten employee, while other companies have hundred if not more.
      With schools, it's the same.
      Another option is that companies and schools bring and take their students and employees. I think that the problem stays.
      Transport in general will stay an issue.
      Including what would be used; Electricity, gasoline, gas, water, etc.
      No matter what product, it will always have a negative impact on nature.
      Personally, with electricity, it's even more devastating; the amount of water that is needed and the pollution of that water after being used. That water cannot be used anymore. I couldn't take out this docu if that water could be filtered. But lately, water is starting to get scarce. Imagine what will happen after 5 years. When electricity is obligated. The destruction of nature will be far worse. Now everything is more expensive, it will be more expensive when that day comes. More corruption, the gap between rich and poor won't be a gap. 2 worlds. Jealousy will be the norm.
      Still, I do think that it's wise to think about alternatives, but it is a very bad thing to see an alternative as the ultimate solution.
      History already have showed and proven it several times.

    • @ThorOdinson543
      @ThorOdinson543 Год назад

      Maybe the "End Goal" is really fewer cars, less food production, and fewer 'useless eaters'.

    • @bellairefondren7389
      @bellairefondren7389 Год назад +1

      @@leftrevolution7 So no where did I say transit is the "ultimate" solution. Not entirely sure what that would entail. I also don't think the complaint you brought up about start and end times being different is that big of a hurdle. You can run frequent transit throughout the day.
      If we want to reduce our overall energy footprint, creating walkable communities and expanding transit will need to be a major focus to of our infrastructure planning.

    • @critiqueofthegothgf
      @critiqueofthegothgf 11 месяцев назад +1

      not really. your logic only works if cars were the only form of transportation known to exist. they arent. there is something called a train. there's also something called a bus. a bike. and legs, for walking

  • @VYBEKAT
    @VYBEKAT Год назад +1

    Very informative and interesting! Excellent work. I just subscribed

  • @LostieTrekieTechie
    @LostieTrekieTechie 2 года назад +685

    What if we increased energy efficiency with steel wheels on steel rails, and ran long extension cords above the roads so vehicles didn't need as large batteries.

    • @whatfireflies
      @whatfireflies 2 года назад +117

      Woah... are you a GENIUS or something!?!

    • @matthewlittler8387
      @matthewlittler8387 2 года назад +269

      We could even combine multiple cars and attach them together

    • @brianpanian2526
      @brianpanian2526 2 года назад +7

      can you say... Milwaukee Railroad

    • @ryangarces9331
      @ryangarces9331 2 года назад +69

      You’re sounding an awful lot like Adam something and I love it

    • @Jomievolution8
      @Jomievolution8 2 года назад +8

      To late I’ve thought of it already and they said no

  • @emilioguzman2801
    @emilioguzman2801 2 года назад +65

    Wow! I'm currently doing an internship at a car manufacturer in Germany and working on environmental responsibility, and the topics we are currently working on the most are alternatives to EVs i.e e-fuels and re-fuels as well as Life Cycle Assessment.
    Great video! This is definitely a thoroughly investigated and researched video and shows the great complexity of solving the fossil fuel dependent economy problem.
    I love your videos! Greetings from Germany!

    • @noahroth2992
      @noahroth2992 2 года назад +1

      Very cool! As someone who loves motorsport, alternatives to batteries always interest me. Have you found any good ones yet? Formula One look to be switching to an e-fuel of some kind, but I'm not sure what exactly their biofuel is.

    • @TKUA11
      @TKUA11 2 года назад

      Environmental responsibility sounds like something a bunch of tree hugging hippies made up to make us feel guilty for not being rich enough to afford expensive electric cars

    • @emilioguzman2801
      @emilioguzman2801 2 года назад +2

      @@noahroth2992 thanks! There are many different types of alternative fuels, for example power-to-gas or liquid-to-gas using hydrogen (especially green hydrogen produced using renewables) or biofuels produced by using food by-products such as corn or, as I recently heard, using wheat scraps!
      It is really interesting and definitely a topic that has to get more mainstream attention especially from politicians (EU looks determined to kill the ICE even though it could use alternative fuels and reduce its emissions). As a environmentalist myself, it is definitely something impressing as you don't normally hear much from the electrification problems...

    • @emilioguzman2801
      @emilioguzman2801 2 года назад +2

      @@TKUA11 it's actually pretty helpful as we are trying to change the business approach from within... The car manufacturer has to change in order to help mitigate the climate impact of its business model

    • @pk47831
      @pk47831 2 года назад +1

      Fuel cells are too expensive because of all the precious metals required. Also green hydrogen as a fuel is extremely inefficient compared to a battery. Cars will run on batteries.

  • @brucew2098
    @brucew2098 8 месяцев назад +1

    That 75% number is scary 😬 even if that number goes down, that's still a lot of carbon from a vehicle that doesn't even burn it itself.
    I wonder how EVs compare to Hygrogen, and bio fuel based vehicles in lifetime carbon emissions.
    The one thing ive found out is that there is no "perfect" solution when it comes to consumerism, everything has a manufacturing, usage, maintenence, and disposal cost.

  • @megapangolin1093
    @megapangolin1093 Год назад +31

    Well done, a thorough and intelligent insight into a truly 21st-century problem. I enjoyed every microsecond of your clearly enunciated, powerfully worded, logical assessment of one of the most important issues of our time. Thank you. I was transfixed.

    • @louisbarningham
      @louisbarningham 8 месяцев назад +2

      Yo hard g

    • @kooooons
      @kooooons 7 месяцев назад +2

      I'd have to disagree. First of all the video focuses on EVs. Yet, more of these materials are needed for mobile devices and tools, than for EVs. Second, It frames the problem as new, current and pressing disregarding the fact that these problems have been criticized for 20 years. Unfortunately back then there was no one interested in the criticism since no one could use it for his anti EV argument. Furthermore, he's fantasizing about solid state, a tech promised to be "around the corner" in 2016, while post lithium tech and LFP batteries are already available or currently launching, but most importantly, this has been a delaying effort for years: "look, solid state is around the corner, better buy a combustion engine now and wait for solid state tech". Creating hopes for solid state is a fatal signal.. Then it completely disregards the fact, that there's almost a decade left to ramp up production and everybody in the industry is heavily investing in it. It just gives one especially bad example of trying to access new lithium sources, while there are many others. Lastly, the video makes it seem, like this is an EV problem but it's a systematic problem. Many materials hav similar if not worse mining conditions if not worse. Again, since nobody can use it as an argument against EVs nobody knows about this.
      The biggest problem of the century is not lithium. The biggest problem is the climate crisis and the misleading information and ignorance that prevents the world from acting on it, like it would be necessary.
      Disclaimer: i'm not saying these problems should be disregarded, only that nobody should think 'oh well, better stick to my diesel truck' because even though mining is bad, mining and burning oil is worse and with proper pressure, these problems can be solved.

    • @megapangolin1093
      @megapangolin1093 7 месяцев назад

      Thank you for your erudite and well argued response, it has been most enlightening.
      @@kooooons

    • @ThomasLee123
      @ThomasLee123 6 месяцев назад

      TOTAL BS. WHERE IS THIS BOOB GETTING HIS FACTS. FIRST, CO2 IS REQUIRED FOR LIFE ON THIS PLANET. AND CO2 MAKES TREES AND CROPS GROW BETTER.

    • @PersonalStash420
      @PersonalStash420 6 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks Mom.😀

  • @SageThyme23
    @SageThyme23 2 года назад +281

    I feel like you really should have touched on the fact that there are two major types of lithium mining. The type of lithium mining you started this video mentioning in Australia is a completely different process than the type of mining being proposed at Thacker pass. I am sure you are aware of the difference but I doubt most people know that lithium is mostly extracted via evaporation rather than traditional mining that you introduced this video with.

    • @RetroDawn
      @RetroDawn 2 года назад +11

      Care to explain the differences for most people?

    • @usernameluis305
      @usernameluis305 2 года назад +13

      @@RetroDawn nah he'll just say there is a difference and give no context or sources. "extracted via evaporation" oh yes now i completely understand

    • @shakenbake1869
      @shakenbake1869 2 года назад +45

      @@RetroDawn The images of the salt lakes and ponds produces lithium brine - a salt solution which is concentrated through evaporation and some refining to purify. The Australian lithium mine shown produces pegmatites, a type of ore (usually about 5-6%) that requires refining and processing into a usable concentrate. Brine type lithium requires a vast quantities of water and land for ponds where as lithium mining uses much more energy to extract and process but this is usually cheaper at scale. If we can use more sustainable energy sources for mining I suspect pegmatites will be cheaper and more sustainable in the long term.

    • @Nill757
      @Nill757 2 года назад +6

      Video was clear about the large amount of water required for evap recovery of Li, the most common method and the one required at Thatcher should it happen.

    • @TBFSJjunior
      @TBFSJjunior 2 года назад

      @@Nill757
      But that is mostly toxic salt water and not quite comparable to drinking water.
      And it isn't a required method as he has shown later in the video there are other methods of getting the salt put of the water.

  • @Daniemililly
    @Daniemililly 2 года назад +299

    Honestly we need to, as societies, be looking at how many cars can we replace with public transport rather than with new cars. So many small towns are unwalkable if you're not at peak fitness or you're ill or disabled, even a bus going back and forth through town a few times a day would make a huge difference to so many lives. When bus services get added, they tend to get used

    • @neverknowsbest4994
      @neverknowsbest4994 2 года назад +27

      the problem is that even in a small town with a decent public transport.. most people still have decided that they need to own a car. for when they need to extend beyond that zone, or they want to go somewhere that public transport doesn't reach etc. and once you have the vehicle, the only incentive not to drive is environmentalism.. and to many that's just not worth the cost of convenience.
      in the US anyways.
      i'm a big car person. i love and prefer personal transport to public. i hate cities and pretty much hate people and being around them. nothing makes me angrier than having to sit near them or breathe their air or listen to their conversations etc. it will not sway me towards public transportation.
      what would be effective to me however is a small light and efficient electric vehicle. something with a small carbon footprint and smaller capability. however i would still need to own a larger vehicle for everything else i need to do. and the economics of multiple vehicles is not compelling enough. so this would need to be something that did not cost a lot to insure, or register, or tax and so forth. it would need to make economic sense to me.
      so it's either electric full size cars and trucks. or a second electric vehicle for the 80% of my life that i spend driving around town and dont need much cargo capacity or range.
      plus i live in the deep south, where its unbearably hot and humid 90% of the year, and colder than we normally are prepared for the other 10%. cycling is a non starter. i cant take my kid to school, i cant get groceries in it. i could go to work on a bike but am unwilling to arrive at work sweaty and tired.

    • @wyskass861
      @wyskass861 2 года назад +20

      This is all good for dense cities. It would be unworkable for most place in the world. You can't sustain a bus service when you'd have just a few passengers per hour

    • @moisesrosario9716
      @moisesrosario9716 2 года назад +7

      yeah electric cars are as space ineficient as normal cars.
      trains from trams to bullet trains along metro and light trains are the answer, they don't get stuck on traffic like buses or trams, they can carry a lot of people on a direct route(they can also diseabled and bicycle friendly), also they can be all electric without bateries.
      trams for small towns, metro for big cities, bullet train across cities far away; buses are better than nothing(mainly for suburbs and the edges of the cities), i think on cities over 1 million people must have a least 3 metro lines; Tokyo(13 lines), London(11 lines) and CDMX(12 lines) are good example of good public transit whit some level of walkability and cycling.

    • @steveqi9309
      @steveqi9309 2 года назад +32

      @@neverknowsbest4994 I am sick and tired of people making the “what about the countryside” argument. What about them? Just because a country is not car dependent doesn’t mean that you can’t drive cars in the countryside. Just look at how a lot of European country does it, they also have countrysides and dense citys, people drive cars when traveling in the countryside and used public transportation when in the cities. And in fact it’s usually even better to drive in these countries because the roads are better maintained since there’s less of them. I don’t get why it’s so hard to understand.

    • @MaddJakd
      @MaddJakd 2 года назад +5

      @John E This! And a lot of the work and ways of living sorta dictate such. Public transportation isn't any good if "afterhours" is a thing....
      And crap tier connections where the closest drop off is 2 miles from the destination, and even then what's a 15 minute trip by car is 1-2 hours by bus on a clear day.
      The amount of overhaul needed to make public trasport even remotely enticing is mind boggling depending on locales.

  • @martinwho
    @martinwho Год назад

    This video was outstanding, I felt the need to write a comment to compliment you folks

  • @critiqueofthegothgf
    @critiqueofthegothgf 11 месяцев назад +1

    9:43 "but to decarbonize driving, solutions must be found". they have been found, and they have existed for hundreds of years. it's called public transit, biking, and walking

  • @alganhar1
    @alganhar1 2 года назад +363

    While I support Electric Vehicles on the whole, it is nice to see someone pointing out the very real issues of the batteries. Personally I see a non carbon road vehicle solution as a mix of traditional electric vehicles for personal and light use, and hydrogen fuel cells for long range bulk haulage use as traditional battery operated vehicles do not scale up so well when it comes to Heavy Goods Vehicles and the like.
    Both technologies of course have their problems, not the least of which is infrastructure buildup as well as issues with the technologies involved. We need to understand these issues however and make informed choices, not simply choose one or the other, or disregard both because of those issues. Both will be needed, and as was so succinctly said, we do have to accept a certain amount of bad for the greater good.

    • @arsenandreasyan4562
      @arsenandreasyan4562 2 года назад +19

      Or we could just keep driving our great ICE cars...

    • @ovencake523
      @ovencake523 2 года назад +9

      not just batteries its a problem with mining in general
      maybe when we get astroid mining we'll pollute earth less

    • @Neojhun
      @Neojhun 2 года назад +1

      Synthetic LPG Autogas basically Alkanes is way better than Hydrogen. It easier to ship transport and much more safer. It's already the 3rd most used light vehicle fuel.

    • @urphakeandgey6308
      @urphakeandgey6308 2 года назад +16

      "we do have to accept a certain amount of bad for the greater good."
      I understand the sentiment, but people need to be hyper-aware of the fact that this kind of logic has justified so much evil in the past. "The Greater Good" is subjective and changes according to the whims of the masses and their fears.

    • @ChilapaOfTheAmazons
      @ChilapaOfTheAmazons 2 года назад +20

      Public transportation, bicycles, walking...
      All of these pollute _far_ less than even the cleanest electric car and could replace most uses of cars in cities.

  • @hayden7027
    @hayden7027 2 года назад +155

    Sounds so obvious but I'm glad this video focuses a little on the lithium being mined. Itrs crazy how many people don't realise that batteries, as good as they are, still require mining non-renewables.

    • @Red24DryBones
      @Red24DryBones 2 года назад +1

      its non-renewable thanks to the lack of recycling as battery can be recycled to recuperate 80% to 95%+ of its raw materials. Its insane why there is a huge reliance mining while very few are working to recycle.

    • @alkostach
      @alkostach 2 года назад +1

      Tell this the green-EU-lunatics. They completely out of touch with reality.

    • @jgringo5516
      @jgringo5516 2 года назад

      …and that those batteries don’t last forever and are “non-renewable.” Trade some air quality in densely populated areas for massive holes in the Earth robbing it’s precious metals, then poising it with dying batteries years later? Nothing Green about it.

    • @gerhardaryawardana72
      @gerhardaryawardana72 2 года назад +4

      Well, then they are just as uninformed as people saying that EVs are worse for the environment than ICEs.
      It is extremely obvious that due to limitations imposed by basic science and reality, non-renewable minerals and metals will need to be mined, often in questionable conditions, and used for the green transition. Solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, everything uses these minerals in one way or another. It's unavoidable. Those materials will need to come from somewhere and often countries that have a lot of them are controlled by scumbags.
      BUT, it is still better than doing nothing and staying our current course. We just need to tolerate it for now while looking for and perfecting better solutions at the same time, i.e. natrium ion batteries. The question now is just like what the video asks in the end: how much bad should be allowed for the greater good?

    • @hubertwalters4300
      @hubertwalters4300 2 года назад +1

      @@gerhardaryawardana72 From what I read from people that have EV' s is not enough range,not enough power and they lose their charge too quickly operating in mountains and deserts,basically most of the same problems that existed with EV' s in the early 20th Century, EV's, imo are just not ready for prime time yet,ok for around town,but that's about it,this is not the kind of car you would be able to take the family on vacation in to the Grand Canyon, then there is the problem of recharging,it takes too long,not like a gasoline powered car that in 5 min you are refueled and back on the road,an EV takes from 6 to 8 hrs to get a complete charge,may as well get a motel room and wait it out,and if you charge at home,watch your power bill go sky high,the money you save on gasoline, that and much more may be spent on electricity and I don't want my tax money spent on installing charging stations, tax money wasn't used to install gasoline pumps,the oil companies or the people who owned the gas station did that themselves,let the EV industry do that themselves,and if everyone went to EV' s where is all of the electricity we will need come from? Electricity doesn't appear by magic,if we can't use nuclear, coal,hydro, natural gas or fuel oil, how will electricity be generated,wind and solar are not reliable,remember Texas when all of that froze up in the winter,imo,I just don't think it is ready for prime time yet,this hasn't been completely thought through,maybe in 50yrs,it seems like the people who want this,while they may be grown people chronologically, they think like a immature 5 year old.I am already 70 yrs old,so unless I live another 50 yrs,I don't think I will see this in my life time.

  • @user-nw2kn8dk7z
    @user-nw2kn8dk7z 8 месяцев назад

    Solid state production also has an added benefit. Data storage size increases exponentially alongside solid state batteries.

  • @johnvannewhouse
    @johnvannewhouse Год назад +2

    MAN!! Can't figure out what side you are on....which is why I immediately subscribed. Damn!! Keep it up!

    • @jokkelar5400
      @jokkelar5400 Год назад +1

      Facts, he's really not on either, he just tells a really good story with great research.

  • @brumpbotungus8425
    @brumpbotungus8425 2 года назад +540

    As a chemical engineer researching electrochemical energy systems and storage, I'd say this is quite accurate. However, there are certainly more challenges relating to solid state batteries than just cost. Namely, charging takes a lot longer and they are more prone to degradation and have poor cycle stability in relation to Li-ion batteries. Also- from my understanding they are more affected by temperature, making them nearly unusable in cold weather. Not mentioning this stuff makes us scientists and engineers look like a bunch of bumbling idiots LOL
    The cost of the metals used in electrochemical systems across the board are increasing, that's undeniable. I'm not sure what the solution is. However, I expect Zn-air to be where battery power ultimately ends up. There are a lot of challenges for us to figure out with Zn-air, but they have the potential to perform amazingly.
    Additionally, the inclusion of supercapacitors to solid state battery powered vehicles may assist in some of the slow charging problems. I know relatively little about them but from my understanding they use a lot of metals that are useful for electrochemical applications, so we'll have to see how economic it is.
    Its a shame that FCVs don't really compare to EVs, but it is what it is. The infrastructure is too difficult to establish, and hydrogen production as of now isn't where it needs to be. Nevertheless, I think the most effective strategy to avoid running out of resources is to diversify the technology, but what will the logistical cost be?

    • @tylerdunlap894
      @tylerdunlap894 2 года назад +16

      That was sort of my thoughts when the FCV’s really started up. My thought was “great we finally decided to stop being stupid”. Then BEV’s picked up instead and I knew we were still incredibly stupid.

    • @songhan1586
      @songhan1586 2 года назад +7

      its probably these issues that are the problems of why we arent moving to solid state batteries, economy of scale thing i don't beleive is a actual issue here. If a company like tesla believed they work and you can give them a price once they order x ammount of batteries per year, they can just move to it themselves and create that so called economy of scale. Problem has to be other things that need to be solved first.

    • @TMS5100
      @TMS5100 2 года назад +4

      supercapacitor power density is abysmal, and they have extremely high self discharge. they are extremely inefficient in almost every possible way.

    • @LilacMonarch
      @LilacMonarch 2 года назад +10

      @@TMS5100 supercapacitors would most likely be used for frequently storing small amounts of energy, for example you might store energy generated by regenerative braking in the supercaps and then discharge them for use by the motor, so they should be emptied by the time you want to use them again

    • @ElementZephyr
      @ElementZephyr Год назад +5

      I think really we need to invest into nuclear for constant electrical energy generation then use hydrogen as a form of "battery storage" for intermittent energy users (eg vehicles). The electricity gained from nuclear would go into our homes and businesses. Then we use the electricity to split H1's from H2O and use the hydrogen as a semi-permanent storage for vehicles, which periodically turn on an off and aren't running all the time.
      The issue I see is that the people with the money simply don't want to invest. It's going to have to come down to a "parallel economy" type situation or we're going to have to cater to them with prospect of earning even more money they they already have from existing procurement and storage methods. This mentality explains why Texas is more eco-friendly than California, which should be nonsense jibber jabber.

  • @yotoronto12
    @yotoronto12 2 года назад +76

    I think this video shows the one thing missing from any discussion on EVs and environmentalism is that every choice you make has a cost no matter the benefit. Things have to be looked at a nuanced way and we shouldn't sugar coat any topic with platitudes.

    • @kavky
      @kavky 2 года назад

      If there was any interest in making cars green, they would have focused on converting existing cars to run on hydrogen fuel.

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring 2 года назад +4

      @@kavky hydrogen is made from fossil fuels (at scale) - why would you convert a fossil fuel car to use another fossil fuel? The tiny amount of Hydrogen made from clean electricity takes 3x as much electricity per mile than an EV does, and costs 10x as much at retail as just plugging in at home.

    • @kavky
      @kavky 2 года назад

      @@brushlessmotoring Burning hydrogen produces only water.

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring 2 года назад +9

      @@kavky manufacturing hydrogen emits CO2 - hydrogen doesn’t exist by itself in large quantities, it exists as part of other things, mainly water, but also hydrocarbons. In order to produce pure hydrogen for a fuel cell you need to separate it, the most common (by far) and economical method is steam reforming methane, which emits CO2. Combusting hydrogen in an engine with air will still produce NOx emissions as well as water, and not a lot of power - it will make your 5 liter engine feel like 1 - if the conversion is even possible - it’s also proven very unreliable due to embrittlement. The only clean way to produce hydrogen, without CO2 emission is using electricity and electrolysis of water - but this - combined with a fuel cell to turn the hydrogen back into electricity takes 3x more energy per mile than just charging an EV does - at retail, green hydrogen is 10x more expensive per mile than domestic electricity in an EV. Hydrogen doesn’t make sense for transportation. It’s too low in energy density, too difficult to handle and too expensive to manufacture. EVs win on every metric, including environmental emissions.

    • @theredspoon1763
      @theredspoon1763 2 года назад +2

      @WhatsApp Unfortunately this concept is complete BS and has been debunked several times within the last years.

  • @exwhyz33
    @exwhyz33 Год назад

    So glad I found this channel. Thank you.

  • @gainimadhu2109
    @gainimadhu2109 Год назад

    hats off to your work

  • @jeffreysmith4586
    @jeffreysmith4586 2 года назад +134

    From my understanding the biggest mineral shortage for EV batteries will be nickel. Lithium is an extremely abundant resource and can be found almost everywhere. Only small amounts of cobalt are used in most EV batteries and some new EV batteries are cobalt free. Nickel though is much less abundant and makes up a pretty large proportion of long range EV batteries. Lower range EV's can use iron phosphate.

    • @mitchellblake1475
      @mitchellblake1475 2 года назад +4

      If memory serves, many asteroids are plentiful in nickel for some reason, so that may be a good source if we can get to the point that we can get to it.

    • @deathgun3110
      @deathgun3110 2 года назад +1

      Or even Sodium-ion batteries.

    • @norfolkdragons866
      @norfolkdragons866 2 года назад +25

      the majority of the world's cobalt is used in refining diesel fuel. So switching to ev's will actually reduce demand for cobalt

    • @Adhithya747
      @Adhithya747 2 года назад +13

      Yeah i think tesla is actually using lithium iron phosphate for shorter range model 3s

    • @willitbreak5825
      @willitbreak5825 2 года назад +14

      Yes, and Tesla’s new 4680 batteries contain no cobalt. The volume and scale of these new batteries will truly be staggering.

  • @NotJustBikes
    @NotJustBikes 2 года назад +739

    This was an exceptionally well-done video. Bravo. This should be a wake-up call that electric cars, in their current form, cannot work.
    Tapakapa has already stated that we should be focusing on better land-use to enable walking, cycling, and public transit. This is absolutely true and this needs to be solution #1. But there are still going to be use-cases for motor vehicles. They should be minimized as much as possible, but they will still be there. We also need to move towards smaller, lighter vehicles.
    Cars and trucks have become *huge* in the past few decades, and it's clear that we need to reverse this trend. We need to focus on making driving fundamentally safer, so that electric vehicles can be smaller and lighter.
    The electric car of the future should have more in common with a Birò than a Tesla. And there needs to be more investment in LEVs (light electric vehicles) for deliveries, like the MEGA E-Worker that is seen all over Amsterdam (especially by the grocery delivery Picnic). These should be the standard for new EVs in the future.

    • @netrox1345
      @netrox1345 2 года назад +2

      this will help but there are still other problems to overcome

    • @InnuendoXP
      @InnuendoXP 2 года назад +26

      @@netrox1345 well the scale & complexity of the issues is so far-reaching someone could write a whole series of essays & you could 'still' say that at the end.

    • @netrox1345
      @netrox1345 2 года назад +3

      @@InnuendoXP if thats the case i can say anything:)

    • @ex0stasis72
      @ex0stasis72 2 года назад +30

      I wonder if a car sales tax based on weight would be effective at incentivizing smaller cars without restricting "freedom."

    • @grambo1980
      @grambo1980 2 года назад +4

      You can’t just wait until there is something better. And delaying the transition by another decade or two I hope solid state delivers.
      Also new lithium clay extraction techniques being tested out and that cobalt is practically phased out for EV batteries.
      Or that Nickel mines such as those in the Philippines are being transformed into more sustainable and ethical mining mostly due to tesla.
      How much bad for the greater good? How much bad and devastation are we causing by oil and fossil fuels ?

  • @Snicker60515
    @Snicker60515 2 года назад +46

    My biggest problem with EVs is and always will be the cost of the vehicle. A decent EV costs about $50k, which for someone who only makes $27k a year, creates a huge problem with affordability. While there will probably be more tax credits and such, that monthly payment is far too great to overcome for someone whose take home pay is less than $2000 a month.
    This "savior" is just going to expose the ever-widening gap between those of us who don't have and those who have, and all the smugness that is going to follow because I absolutely refuse to buy a 50 thousand dollar smartphone that will need to be replaced after 5-6 years with another 50 thousand dollar device that I CANNOT afford. But my 12-year old Honda, still works great, doesn't cost that much to run, and will be dead reliable for another 5-10 years if I maintain it properly.
    Sorry for being so poor, but this isn't worth how much more damage is going to be done to OUR ONLY HOME IN THE UNIVERSE BTW, so that Li and Co and Ni shareholders can get richer while the po' folks who have to mine it suffer more and more, and who also can't afford to buy the cars that their excruciating work is helping to build.

    • @ZingNovaVODS
      @ZingNovaVODS Год назад +2

      They only cost this much because EV's arent as mass produced as combustion vehicles, in the future they will actually be cheaper to construct than combustion engines. as Graphene battery packs will cost a lot less than entire engine and transmission systems, with graphene being an extremely cheap material.

    • @joebrandon1730
      @joebrandon1730 Год назад

      You don't care about the toxic chemicals, human slavery and environmental destruction that comes with EVs? They are significantly more harmful to the environment than ICEs and most of the EV can't be recycled. The battery just gets buried and a lot of the plastic isn't recyclable. EVs are a stupid dream.

    • @braticuss
      @braticuss Год назад +3

      @@ZingNovaVODS That's a big maybe

    • @Athair48
      @Athair48 Год назад +3

      @@ZingNovaVODS the cost isn't the problem it's the thought that evs will somehow save the earth, they won't.

    • @smh9902
      @smh9902 Год назад +3

      @@ZingNovaVODS Thats bullshit, ICE's are bone simple to make despite their "high number of moving parts" because EV motors need special metallurgy with tight hysterisis curves, wheras pistons, rods, and cranks need only be drop forged and ground. Tesla is as mass produced as any other car, economies of scale wont fix this problem my guy. The reality is this, ICE's are coming that are just as efficient as the turbines used to power the grid itself, and it will be cheaper to drive an ICE car than an EV, and indeed cheaper to run a generator than buy from the grid. The EV is a scam, full stop.

  • @jerrynadler2883
    @jerrynadler2883 Год назад +3

    Artisanal mining 🤣🤣It's honestly how I feel about anything being sold as 'artisanal'

  • @flaviosalatino8192
    @flaviosalatino8192 2 года назад +28

    the video overall is good but i'ts missing a few points:
    1) cobalt is being phased out of evs, basically everywhere
    2) who is the largest consumer of cobalt? the oil industry to refine oil to be used in ice vehicles
    3) missing the elphant in the room that is the new Tesla dry extraction method of mining and refining lithium
    4) battery recycling will be a thing, there are already tens of companies with big funding behind them ( redwood material for example)
    this are just the first that comes to my mind

    • @RetroDawn
      @RetroDawn 2 года назад +3

      The manufacturers, including Tesla, of course, haven't designed their batteries for recyclability and replaceability--they want you to buy a new one. And no one's commercialized the post-consumer recycling process, yet. It's very difficult and expensive. If there's to be any semblance of "green" to this technology, then they need to prioritize recycling. This is *far* more important than most other forms of recycling, where there isn't a market for the materials, and most is just thrown away, instead--especially since China started refusing our recyclables for recycling.
      Ironcially, Tesla's ex-CTO and cofounder is the founder of Redwood, the only company recycling EV batteries--but that's 100% pre-consumer (manufacturing defects), and they are using a hybrid pyro/hydro solution that burns away much of the lithium and other materials.
      However, we need to use these batteries for as long as possible before recycling. I doubt there are any businesses that are purchasing used EV batteries for reuse currently, though. They could be useful for non-mobile usages, such as the grid. But, they'll never do that--at least not in the US.

    • @samuel999
      @samuel999 2 года назад

      Yes and also Australia alone has about 100 years worth of lithium supply at current rate, also in a method that is comparatively environmentally friendly to mine. It just costs more.

    • @robbenvanpersie1562
      @robbenvanpersie1562 2 года назад

      @@samuel999 source?

  • @xdonnix
    @xdonnix 2 года назад +139

    As many have said in the comments, for most people cars are an extremely inefficient means of transport - regardless of their energy source.
    A move towards public transport and smaller electronic power personal transport (ebikes etc.) seems to be an actual green step forwards.
    Even the current system of traffic lights could be optimized - think about how much energy is wasted among all the cars when 3 lanes of traffic need to come to stop to allow one car to make a turn.

    • @mayonnaiseluther1568
      @mayonnaiseluther1568 2 года назад +28

      Too many people view the world through the lense of a city. Public transportation is horrifically ineffective on an individual level when you dont live in a city and when theres no biking infrastructure like Amsterdam you can't really bike.

    • @incognito8646
      @incognito8646 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/0PIND0YO3KU/видео.html

    • @elli6220
      @elli6220 2 года назад +24

      @@mayonnaiseluther1568 Most people live in cities. There will always be people out in the country but people in cities shouldn't have to drive.
      And yes a lot of cities don't have good infrastructure like Amsterdam. That's the point. We need to build it.

    • @villz1267
      @villz1267 2 года назад +5

      Goodluck in the next pandemic LOLOLOL

    • @Bundpataka
      @Bundpataka 2 года назад +12

      @@mayonnaiseluther1568 the Los Angeles metro, a horribly low density area, had a robust public transportation system before the invention of the car

  • @happytrails151
    @happytrails151 8 месяцев назад

    For the Thacker Pass issue, couldnt they use rail to ship the minerals to be processed in a place with water issues, pollution concern, or land issues?

  • @wtl912
    @wtl912 Год назад +6

    Amazing video (congratulations!) but 9:39 we're missing the MAIN SOLUTION: consume less --> drive less & car sharing.

  • @TrippedCoasty
    @TrippedCoasty 2 года назад +168

    At 14:35 you mention that electric vehicles are responsible for 75% less emmisions compared to ICE vehicles even when factoring in production, usage, and scrapping. Would you be able to cite sources for that as I would love to read further on it!

    • @Mrcharles.
      @Mrcharles. 2 года назад +32

      Yes climate change is real but governments mandating the potential ban of ICE is not the way to go for solving this crisis. There has to be another way.

    • @arsenandreasyan4562
      @arsenandreasyan4562 2 года назад +53

      Good point. 75% sounds like a stretch

    • @lastminutesolutions
      @lastminutesolutions 2 года назад +13

      @@Mrcharles. I loved cars since before I can even remember and now I research transport policy. Unfortunately there is no other way as of now. Just way too many people on earth to be using such inefficient machines to get around.

    • @Mrcharles.
      @Mrcharles. 2 года назад +26

      @@lastminutesolutions perhaps if the government had invested in other modes of transportation like high speed rail 50 years ago we wouldn’t have this problem.

    • @KaifamGaming
      @KaifamGaming 2 года назад +6

      all of the sources are in the description hope this helps

  • @Jack-yt8ml
    @Jack-yt8ml 2 года назад +198

    In The Netherlands the goal is not necessarily to replace Electric cars from ICE, but also to drastically reduce the number of cars completely. This will skew the actual amount of lithium needed and the amount of cars to replace. This is the real target and it is 100% realistic to see half the amount of cars on the road within a decade due to a great plan to build out a massive public transport system and to invest in that with a long term plan.

    • @gondolagripes1674
      @gondolagripes1674 2 года назад +4

      Maybe it'll work when your population density is 100x ours lol

    • @Hopkins955
      @Hopkins955 2 года назад +18

      Good luck with that in Central Europe. I was travelling by bus in Hungary last summer and the journey took 3 times as much as by car. Also I just saw in the news that in Slovakia where I live they had to cancel multiple trains and busses because of the lack of drivers.

    • @cpufreak101
      @cpufreak101 2 года назад +13

      No wonder why much of the hate against EV's I see comes from the US where we *still* have few plans to offer much in the way of public transit, even within cities

    • @seasong7655
      @seasong7655 2 года назад +11

      The electric buses and electric bicycles will also increase lithium demand

    • @bmw803
      @bmw803 2 года назад +8

      @@cpufreak101 Americans arent anti EV. Charging is the problem. F-150 sells like hotcakes, so price isnt an issue for all. when your car takes 150kw, but its charging at half due to temps or charger issue??? I see PHEVs succeed in U.S. no need to build chargers and modify your electrical system at home as most PHEVs draw 16amps. Upgrading to 200 amps can cost up to 20K if lines are underground.

  • @ThorOdinson543
    @ThorOdinson543 Год назад +2

    "How much bad should be allowed for the greater good" => The ends justify the means => the justification for every evil in history.

  • @careycrash9916
    @careycrash9916 Год назад +3

    There is no free lunch and never will be .

  • @universalcollective427
    @universalcollective427 2 года назад +75

    Dear Mr. Wen Dover, your humanity, while explaining the moral tradeoffs, without a shadow of doubt, opened a great many people's third eye. I just wanted to thank you for that. Helluva job you're doing. You sir are a good egg.

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 2 года назад +1

      Yes. Rhymes with Bend Over but without any negativity.

  • @emslieboy98
    @emslieboy98 2 года назад +88

    Seeing a Wendover video relating to solid-state batteries (the area of research I did my masters in) is surreal
    I’m hoping to get further qualifications at some point and work as a researcher for an institution focusing on solid-state battery research, so it’s awesome seeing the topic discussed

    • @DyslexicMitochondria
      @DyslexicMitochondria 2 года назад

      It was such a well made video

    • @sterlingarcher8041
      @sterlingarcher8041 2 года назад

      @@DyslexicMitochondria hey bro i watch your videos. Big fan of your channel

    • @realdevbro447
      @realdevbro447 2 года назад +1

      @@DyslexicMitochondria some comments pointed out there need to have more clarification on solid state part. Other than that , pretty informative video.

    • @bthemedia
      @bthemedia 2 года назад

      sounds like Wendover was a bit misinformed / not fully aware of the solid state battery topic and tradeoffs though 🤷‍♂️

  • @JoeSharp1
    @JoeSharp1 Год назад

    Such a great video. Thanks for creating

  • @globaldemise
    @globaldemise Год назад +2

    Wow…..I just found your channel. Excellent, nuanced, and balanced. Very rare

  • @ahadmerchant9498
    @ahadmerchant9498 2 года назад +60

    I adore that conclusion. One of your best videos because of it.
    Running the theme of the video throughout and then relating it to new and current issues hit the point extra home. Goosebumps.

    • @eromod
      @eromod 2 года назад +1

      Scientific predictions about weather have historically been as wrong as religious predictions about the end times. The science is wrong. Co2 levels used to be higher than now in dinosaur times and life flourished because Co2 is plant food. Banning gas cars is tyranny.

    • @JaharNarishma
      @JaharNarishma 2 года назад +1

      @@eromod You seem to ignore a lot. The carbon dioxide levels were higher before, true.
      The issue is everything else, the context. Going from our levels of green house gas to way higher levels heats the planet. This makes climates change. A change in climates gives a change in circumstances for everything living.
      Real life example of context: if a dry area, say a place in the southwest of Asia, would get less rain as an effect of warmer air being able to absorb more water vapour (fewer clouds are formed).
      Less rain would make it hard for the plants to survive. This leads to what is called a drought. A decrease in available water which noticeably affects the life of the area.
      Droughts happen from time to time, but with a higher temperature it will happen way more.
      If fewer plants survive that means less food for whatever eats the plants, e.g. humans.
      Humans live in societies. They often want to stay in their society rather than move to another society. People have a sense of belonging to their home, both the location and its culture. In order for the society to be stable it tries to plan for bad things happening to its people. With a prolonged drought the government needs to find food for its people in other ways. If the people starves the government has to act quickly or a revolution is likely to happen. Hungry people are not planning for the long haul, it's do or die. A semi spontaneous revolution is bound to happen.
      A lot of different groups tries to take charge, since the straw that broke the camel's back wasn't a political one. The revolution was not politically driven.
      Civil war ensues. Syria is in shambles. Massive emigration, international aide that's military, monetary and humanitary.
      The change from one amount of green house gase to another lead to the war in Syria. Context matters.
      It isn't the absolute amount, it is the relative change.
      We've had ice ages, we've had warm periods. They came and went slowly. Now we have a rapid change. The context can't keep up with the change. Evolution of species take time so animals and plants have no chance to adapt. Humans have a chance, but capitalism and nationalism is impeding.
      Sea levels have risen and some people can't "go back to where they came from" because their home is playing with Atlantis, hiding under the ocean.

    • @eromod
      @eromod 2 года назад +1

      @@JaharNarishma Sea levels have risen? Just look up old picture of the statue of liberty compared to new pictures of the statue of liberty., The water level is the same!
      Plus, NASA said that in 2014, the north pole had the most ice ever recorded!
      All these climate "scientists" cant get their facts straight. First they said it was getting too hot, then they said it was getting too cold. Now they just call it "climate change" to say that the extreme temperature differences change.
      But if you look throughout history when life thrived, the temperature fluctuations are perfectly normal!
      CO2 is plant food and gas is a much better energy storage solution than current battery technology.

    • @eromod
      @eromod 2 года назад +1

      @@JaharNarishma Even if the sea levels did rise, its still moral to keep using oil because its such a superior energy storage solution.
      Yall could just move to Antartica because it would warm up enough to even farm and import from Canada for extra help.

    • @MaeLSTRoM1997
      @MaeLSTRoM1997 Месяц назад

      @@eromodunfortunately, it's not as simple as 'move to somewhere that's cold right now but will be warmer as climate changes.' there is what's commonly called 'tipping points' in climatology, where once you pass certain threshold, the climate system either settles into a new state or into runaway instability due to positive feedback loop.
      1. Conversion of ice sheets into water increases the albedo (roughly speaking, how much light/heat a surface absorbs; e.g. white surfaces absorb less light, dark surfaces absorb more light), which further drives temperature increase due to increased heat absorption.
      2. Currently, the ocean is absorbing a lot of CO2 from the air, as evidenced by ecological consequences of ocean acidification reported around the world. However, gas solubility in liquid solvent decreases when temperature increases, meaning at some point, the ocean will start to release a huge amount of dissolved CO2 and currently stable methane deposits on the sea floor, exacerbating the greenhouse effect.
      3. As average global temperature increases, rate of ocean evaporation also increases, and vapor is in itself a greenhouse gas, and so it will accelerate the temperature increase.
      While individual tipping point events may not in themselves be catastrophic (e.g. the loss of the entire antarctic ice sheet will add ~0.6C to global temperature), these tipping point events can form a cascading chain, and we don't know for sure when the cascade would end. For example we could end up like venus, where the greenhouse effect is so strong that the average surface temperature is over 400C/800F, which would make human survival impossible.

  • @AnchonCat
    @AnchonCat 2 года назад +90

    The last 30 seconds of narration was beautifully written. Well done

    • @ThomasLee123
      @ThomasLee123 6 месяцев назад

      AND COMPLETELY FULL OF UNMITIGATED LIES.

    • @piousbox
      @piousbox 6 месяцев назад +2

      "is it worth to allow individuals to own guns" - that part? That mentality is absurdly inverted. Let me ask you: is it worth to allow you to own any capital? capital can be used for nefarious purposes. Let's keep you poor, it's safer. Let's keep you unarmed, it's safer.

    • @Olds_Pwr
      @Olds_Pwr 6 месяцев назад

      @@piousboxI didn’t see anything about guns.

  • @patriciaacevedo4429
    @patriciaacevedo4429 Год назад +1

    The damage to the admosphere is 75% less but the damage to the soil is what is has to be account.

  • @moa3008
    @moa3008 Год назад +7

    There’s going to have to be a lot of open pit mining wherever there’s lithium.

    • @petesmitt
      @petesmitt Год назад

      not in the biggest producer Chile.. do some research.

    • @moa3008
      @moa3008 Год назад

      @@petesmitt I’ve seen a picture of an open pit mine that’s in Chile where there’s mining of the lithium material for the electrical vehicles.

    • @petesmitt
      @petesmitt Год назад +2

      @@moa3008
      Chile is the largest producer of lithium and all I could find was an open pit mine run by BHP in the middle of the desert area where Chile produces lithium; but it's a copper mine, not lithium..

    • @moa3008
      @moa3008 Год назад

      @@petesmitt I wasn’t sure about that.
      There’s a local indigenous group living in the area that have been complaining about the water; and land pollution; that is a problem with open pit mining for any kind of minerals.

    • @petesmitt
      @petesmitt Год назад +1

      @@moa3008Lithium in Chile is extracted from brine via huge surface lakes that use a lot of water, which is a big environmental impact for a desert area. Nothing to do with open pit mining though..

  • @JoseGSada
    @JoseGSada 2 года назад +71

    I was expecting the video to mention Lithium Ion battery recycling enterprises, such as Li-Cycle and Redwood. Battery recyclers will play a crucial role in alleviating the battery supply chain.

    • @RetroDawn
      @RetroDawn 2 года назад +11

      The manufacturers haven't designed the batteries for recyclability, and no one's commercialized the recycling process, yet. It's very difficult and expensive. If there's to be any semblance of "green" to this technology, then they need to prioritize recycling. This is *far* more important than most other forms of recycling, where there isn't a market for the materials, and most is just thrown away, instead--especially since China started refusing our recyclables for recycling.

    • @pierredelecto7069
      @pierredelecto7069 2 года назад +4

      @@RetroDawn it's coming. Most lithium used to be in laptop and cellphone batteries. It's only now that's it's in car batteries. Huge packs are easier to recycle.
      Cars as a waste product are very recycled. The plastics. The steel. The copper. Just about all the bits get used.
      Currently it's tens of thousands of batteries hitting the wreck lots per year. Not enough to sustain an industry. Give it 5 years-7 years. Tesla made 1 million this year. In 7 years that's a lot of batteries to recycle n
      Today we are recycling the batteries from their first few years. They were only making tens of thousands of cars then.

    • @RetroDawn
      @RetroDawn 2 года назад +3

      @@pierredelecto7069 We're not recycling any post-consumer EV batteries yet. Unfortunately, none of the EV manufacturers, including Tesla, are designing their batteries to be replaced, let alone recycled. They want people to just buy a new one. Ironcially, Tesla's ex-CTO and cofounder is the co-founder of Redwood, the only company recycling EV batteries--but that's 100% pre-consumer (manufacturing defects), and they are using a hybrid pyro/hydro solution that burns away much of the lithium and other materials.
      However, we need to use these batteries for as long as possible before recycling. I doubt there are any businesses that are purchasing used EV batteries for reuse currently, though. They could be useful for non-mobile usages, such as the grid. But, they'll never do that--at least not in the US.

    • @pierredelecto7069
      @pierredelecto7069 2 года назад +4

      @@RetroDawn I don't think there's many EV batteries even available yet. Even as scrap commodity the demand is high. People will search out crashed Teslas to re use the battery. Not recycle it.
      I was thinking that as millions of battery operated cars are retired each year, which will happen eventually, that at that point there will be enough supply to encourage an industry.
      First step to having a lithium recycling industry is having a huge source of lithium that needs recycling. I'm no engineer. Just a car guy.

    • @MineGames66
      @MineGames66 2 года назад +1

      @@RetroDawn Tesla actually has a recycling program of their own (as do every self respecting battery manufacturer ) but it’s quite small since not very many evs are of the road yet. But a good few thousand tons are recycled per year. It’s in their impact report.

  • @rubenayla
    @rubenayla 2 года назад +12

    I love this realization: If we have very cheap energy, everything becomes cheap.
    With cheap energy you can pump lots of seawater and filter it if needed, you can extract elements from their ores through electrolysis or many energy intensive processes, you have heat, light, cold, power for movement, power for hydroponic crops, which lets you create high quality food without the land, you can create fuels with CO2 and water... Everything becomes cheap and abundant.

    • @BenPyman
      @BenPyman 2 года назад +4

      This is why I think fusion power is our road to post scarcity.

  • @that_hoser_143
    @that_hoser_143 Год назад +1

    I'm currently writing a paper and doing a source evaluation. You all go above and beyond to produce your content keep up the good work.

  • @user-vm9vt6gx7y
    @user-vm9vt6gx7y 8 месяцев назад

    "one option, rather than finding more raw materials, is to need less of them, of course the way to do that is by making batteries better" thats a way to do it, however many would argue the better way is to reduce consumption. not everyone needs a car. we need better transit, less sprawl, and less car dependancy.
    Your videos are great, and I get that you didnt mean it was the only way, but how thats stated makes it sounds like our consumption is at a healthy level, which it currently just is not.

  • @CharlesGregory
    @CharlesGregory 2 года назад +31

    I was hoping for a mention of LFP (lithium iron phosphate) batteries. These contain zero cobalt, and so eliminate the most problematic mineral. The standard edition of Tesla’s Model 3 use this type of battery.

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring 2 года назад +1

      But that would ruin the EV hit-piece narrative - funny how everyone is _suddenly_ wringing their hands over batteries now they are in vehicles - they never had a problem with phones and laptops, and no mention of cobalt usage in gasoline refining, or lithium in medicine.
      This is an Oil and Gas funded narrative to delay EV takeup and make sure we continue to burn fossil fuels and pollution the atmosphere, this video, and it's plastic wrapping sponsor, are not interesting in climate change.

    • @ImRichRu
      @ImRichRu 2 года назад +3

      Phosphate is the single biggest limit to life on earth. Shifting from cobalt to phosphate would put even more strain on global food production. It's also not green to mine and most deposits contain a decent amount of radioactive products. There are huge superfund sites all over Florida from phosphate mine tailings.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 2 года назад +1

      They have a lower energy density, but are superior in just about every other way.

    • @theelite1x721987
      @theelite1x721987 2 года назад +4

      @@brushlessmotoring Cars use a LOT more lithium than any phone or laptop. Like, a LOT more. Multiply that by the sheer number of cars in the US, let alone the world and you have an exponential increase in lithium demand over phones, laptops etc. The science is there. We will be creating a new problem while we solve our current one. This is why I can't stand the "EV's are awesome" narrative. EV's are nice, they have upsides and help solve a current problem but god damn, people are blind to the new problems we are going to create/make much worse.

    • @xanpenguin754
      @xanpenguin754 2 года назад +1

      Probably because the problem of lithium still exists.
      It’s a step in the right direction but making it sound like it’s the ultimate solution is still not good. Lithium mining especially in less developed locations is notoriously poor for the environment. And expanding the mines will simply make the problem worse.
      Sam was showing the problem with lithium ion batteries and lithium production.
      Solid state batteries were brought up because with time they are a viable solution. LFPs aren’t.

  • @andrascsaszar7132
    @andrascsaszar7132 2 года назад +96

    Finally! Been waiting long for someone to talk about this

    • @michaelmoccio2225
      @michaelmoccio2225 2 года назад

      Check out Undecided with Matt Ferrell, he does stuff like this all the time

    • @tanjoy0205
      @tanjoy0205 2 года назад

      I wonder which company will rise from the production.

    • @PeteS_1994
      @PeteS_1994 2 года назад

      We are also apparently going through a battery revolution so maybe a solution can be found.

  • @louamato6332
    @louamato6332 Год назад +4

    This highlights great pluses and minutes that need to be addressed in the combustion engine-ev debate. Add to that the electrical infrastructure cannot support that amount of ev production and we have a very complicated problem here to solve. Not unsolvable, but we need to keep striving for better solutions given ALL of the variables and people affected.

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 Год назад +2

      The solution : stop the global warming scam.

    • @AyuwuSuperFan
      @AyuwuSuperFan Год назад +1

      one word: electrofuels. there is literally no point to EVs anymore. ice cars remain our best option

  • @LR0278
    @LR0278 7 месяцев назад

    You forgot one crucial point. WE DONT HAVE ENOUGH POWER TO CHARGE THEM ALL

  • @ericbalaam47
    @ericbalaam47 2 года назад +17

    Hey all, Financial Analyst for the energy production industry here - this is a cool video, its true that more lithium = more water use. For future prospects check out Fe Ion batteries though. It's about 8x more profitable than lithium (which is insane!) So that's probably where the industry will go.
    Edit: profitability of Iron ion batteries is a large driver for change, but speed of production, social pressures, and energy density all err in favor of Iron as well

    • @alqash6749
      @alqash6749 2 года назад +3

      Big if true

    • @mark_5588
      @mark_5588 2 года назад +3

      LiFePo4 (LFP) technology has it's place but it is larger and heavier for the same amount of energy delivered so it will only ever work in a class where those properties fit the engineering solution.

  • @paralipsis
    @paralipsis 2 года назад +259

    Without a shift towards public transport, and an order of magnitude or more reduction in private vehicle usage, it's not going to be anywhere near good enough to avert catastrophe. And that's assuming that it is in conjuction with massive decarbonization in non-transport sectors at the same time. Trams, trains, and trolley buses bypass the battery problem entirely.

    • @Hjernespreng
      @Hjernespreng 2 года назад +37

      Exactly. The automotive industry's lobbyists GUTTED public transport in America.

    • @davidturner4076
      @davidturner4076 2 года назад +28

      No, thanks. I'll keep my big yard, big house and big car. I live in a very car dependent city and I LOVE it.

    • @bryanjk
      @bryanjk 2 года назад +11

      @@Hjernespreng there is some nuance to it, the US is huge and impractical for public in many areas due to low population density. However I do agree with you in many areas (such as where I grew up, in the suburbs of Indiana)

    • @bryanjk
      @bryanjk 2 года назад +7

      @@davidturner4076 agreed.

    • @thegirthquake8574
      @thegirthquake8574 2 года назад +3

      Or... There's an alternative-- don't ban fossil fuels. We can also invest in synthetic fuels or hydrogen.

  • @michaelbuckers
    @michaelbuckers 8 месяцев назад

    0:30 it's the blend of high capacity and high capacity. Lithium batteries are among the least safe, least reliable and and least affordable energy storage cells. The fact that each lithium battery needs its own separate circuit built into each individual cell just to make sure that it doesn't explode during day-to-day operation should tell a story.

  • @GelatinCoffee
    @GelatinCoffee 8 месяцев назад +7

    So glad to know that I've been missing out on double battery life in my phone, laptop, and possibly even things like portable handheld consoles/console remotes. All because their respective tech giant are sleeping and not noticing the amazing battery technology

    • @Nothingtoya
      @Nothingtoya 8 месяцев назад +3

      They know about it. Look up what the price would be to power any of those devices with a solid state battery. You'll find your answer there.

    • @kooooons
      @kooooons 7 месяцев назад

      Mobile devices have significantly different requirements than for example automotive batteries and longevity is not one of them while at the same time others are colliding with longevity. One requirement is an extremely high energy and power density which is why still more cobalt goes into mobile devices, than in EVs, even though the produced storage capacity might be lower.

  • @notthedroidsyourelookingfo4026
    @notthedroidsyourelookingfo4026 2 года назад +49

    When looking at the modal share around the world (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modal_share), it becomes clear that the almost absolute car dependency of citizens in the US is also *unique* to the US.
    Therefore, what is really needed, is to fix zoning issues (=allow mixed development), and to build cycling and public transit infrastructure.

    • @nazarenoperezpelicon947
      @nazarenoperezpelicon947 2 года назад +2

      Jesus Christ in almost all North American cities 90% move around in cars. That's insane

    • @Nill757
      @Nill757 2 года назад

      Bi coastal population, spread over a continent with vast plains in the middle. *That* is what’s unique about the US (and Canada), and the transportation and residence situation flows from all that.

    • @nazarenoperezpelicon947
      @nazarenoperezpelicon947 2 года назад

      @@Nill757 that makes sense for the mid west and rockys. But on the east coast, south and around the Great lakes you have about 2/3 of the population and with a fairly good pop density. Sure, Las Vegas and Salt Lake city probably rely more on highways to function, but there is no excuse when cities like Miami, Atlanta and Charleston work solely on personal cars

    • @Nill757
      @Nill757 2 года назад

      @@nazarenoperezpelicon947 Huh? Atlanta has 48 miles of subway train w 30+ stations, and a huge bus service. How is that only cars?
      Miami is on the ocean, water table in your face. What exactly do you expect them to do, knock down all the buildings to run surface trains?

    • @BosonCollider
      @BosonCollider 2 года назад +1

      @@Nill757 No. Most cities were buldozed to make space for cars in the 50s and 60s. It didn't use to be this way and the US used to have a world-class public transit system before WWII for example

  • @paul_null
    @paul_null 2 года назад +56

    Why were LFP batteries not mentioned. They are frequently used in buses and standard range model 3s. Although sightly less energy dense, they contain no nickel or cobalt. They also last longer, are safer and are here now.

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring 2 года назад +12

      because this was an anti EV hit piece? No mention of any context around other methods of transportation propulsion, just lots of scary 'look! bad things!' around batteries used in EVs (but not batteries used in other devices for the last 20 years - which, even now, are the far greater users of Lithium, Cobalt and Nickel)

    • @KayAteChef
      @KayAteChef 2 года назад +30

      @@brushlessmotoring Not a hit piece. He says the quantities needed are about to go vertical and explains the trade offs. It was balanced.

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring 2 года назад +6

      @@KayAteChef not without talking about the impacts of our current solution - Oil - without context about why we need to make the change, it's just a vague anti-change piece. Nothing is perfect, and we need to act now - the transition to EVs is already going to take too long, trying to wait another decade with vague promises about solid state batteries is harmful.

    • @KayAteChef
      @KayAteChef 2 года назад +5

      @@brushlessmotoring The impression that I got was that we had to shift volume now to achieve economy of scale. No delays.

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring 2 года назад

      @@KayAteChef I have not seen solid state at scale - if it were possible, there would be crazy thin phones and smart watches with it in already - maybe premium price points - but for certain applications, there is a market for the benefits they tout - so where are the products? Dyson hung his hat on having solid state in his new EV - he had to first change that position when it was clearly not possible - then abandoned the whole project. Where is the luxury super thin fast charging Apple Watch ‘Rich Dude Edition’ with a solid state battery in it? They made a gold for 10 grand, don’t you thing they would have offered something similar by now? And if they can make it at low volume tiny cell luxury watch volume, how are they going to scale it to a car? It took 49 years for lithium ion to go from lab, to military use, to expensive consumer electrics to expensive small battery vehicles to eventually mid priced electric vehicles and probably another 5 to 10 to get to affordable electric vehicles. Solid state is still in the lab. Tell me what product you can but with a solid state battery in it and I’ll change my mind.

  • @eclipsenow5431
    @eclipsenow5431 10 месяцев назад +2

    It's a good thing many other countries including Australia are starting to get into cobalt mining, and that LFP batteries don't even use rare earth's like cobalt

    • @ChannelNews1
      @ChannelNews1 10 месяцев назад

      I interviewed a top energy expert on my home page vid. A must watch interview. The expert warns that EV conversion will not happen and oil can never be replaced

    • @jmitterii2
      @jmitterii2 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@ChannelNews1 Lithium batteries as they are including the problems with solid state batteries which cannot be recharged... kind of a big problem.... doesn't help the conventional cobalt lithium nickel batteries are dangerous in that they develop dendrites that short out the battery causing thermal runaways and battery goes up in sparks... lithium just as all alkali metals react (burn) in contact with water. Still makes me giggle on all the various EV's that go up in flames, that fire fighters are puzzled why it keeps burning for days and even weeks after the initial start, when they're literally trying to put the fire out with water.
      EV also doesn't solve the solution of where we get that energy either, but tries to centralize to a power plant producing the electricity. So it pushes the problem to central power plants.
      Nuclear is really the only option. Even if you think a hydrogen fuel cell cars. And trains... lots and lots of trains. And city level, regional, and long distant trains.
      Better than driving and often more efficient as it cuts down on traffic jams. Easy to achieve economy of scale. And can electrify them using a nuclear power plant or solar or wind or hydro non carbon electric grid to power the rails. Individual mode of transportation used when required in super rural areas, and of the individual car, right now the best option for now is hybrid reducing the amount of fossil fuels used.
      And maybe hydrogen fuel cells... problem with hydrogen, similar to that of lithium EV cars, is that it's dangerous. Hydrogen has immense energy density; highest of all other materials. But with such an energy density, it has extreme explosive potential. H2 released and mingled with ambient atmospheric gas becomes extremely explosive; irony the biproduct other than heat is H2O... but the explosive energy can tear a garage or house apart in a second... H2 mixed with the O2 in the atmosphere, a tiny ignition sources as a spark from just static electricity... and boom.
      The problem is real. And at present moment I can only see that nuclear would be the best way forward in order to maintain our energy needs for our current tech. And of nuclear; both the current uranium plants can be made safer, and there are other new potential methods to make thorium and even uranium plants not require pressurized cores eliminating the chance of a meltdown incident. Waste is the problem, so there needs to be discussion and commitment to where to place that waste material... and not spend billions and decide that there's contention against placing it in that location.

    • @ChannelNews1
      @ChannelNews1 8 месяцев назад

      @@jmitterii2 thanks for that. Can you please repost this on my home page vid? There are many commenting in there with the same silly arguments and that would be a great reply to them.

  • @jimgrady8004
    @jimgrady8004 6 месяцев назад

    I used to have to travel for my work. Meetings, site visits, training my team. Much of this need for travel has been replaced by virtual means. In some ways it has been a better way to function but there are trade-offs and compromises to be made. Having said that, there are things in my personal life that I'm not willing to abandon at the altar of the green new deal. Not because I'm a contrarian, but because I am reasonably sceptical of the motivations and "science" behind the demands for change.

  • @yrification
    @yrification 2 года назад +29

    As an electrician in the Uk. This is very informative 👍 the struggle is massive. Not just batteries but the demand on the supply network.

    • @TheStriker0525
      @TheStriker0525 2 года назад +3

      now imagine that demand in 2030 when everyone gets home from work and wants to charge there cars! lol

  • @madeleine3548
    @madeleine3548 2 года назад +262

    the problem with lithium ion batteries is that they're too big to swallow whole

    • @potatojake197
      @potatojake197 2 года назад +20

      Just get a bigger hole

    • @6z0
      @6z0 2 года назад +28

      @@potatojake197 you would know

    • @muffinkillen00
      @muffinkillen00 2 года назад +3

      depends if its cylindrical or prismatic

    • @potatojake197
      @potatojake197 2 года назад +7

      @@6z0 as a matter of fact you're right

    • @Bigvs.Dickvs
      @Bigvs.Dickvs 2 года назад +18

      I've seen women swallowing bigger "things", some of them with batteries inside.

  • @Rene-uz3eb
    @Rene-uz3eb 8 месяцев назад

    Thacker pass is a freaking desert. Hard to find a place where mining does less damage. I think it's important mining happens here precisely so that environmental impacts can be minimized to lead to processes that can also be used in the rest of the world.

  • @leviandhiro3596
    @leviandhiro3596 8 месяцев назад

    Going "green" is only green for the pockets of the politicians

  • @car9472
    @car9472 2 года назад +560

    Im all for more electric vehicles, but outright banning internal combustion ones when we arent even close to ready for that is impressively stupid

    • @novastar6112
      @novastar6112 2 года назад +44

      username checks out

    • @fatalityin1
      @fatalityin1 2 года назад +40

      They were not banned, people are still allowed to drive around with them. It was banned to sell any new combustion car made after 2030. Until the last combustion cars leave those countries it is going to take up until 2050, because people there on average drive their car for 18 years.

    • @adventurefaps9571
      @adventurefaps9571 2 года назад +49

      @@fatalityin1 still seems dumb since it kinda seems like its reducing the potential of improvements in internal combustion engine tech. Seems best to set high MPG standards. That might have the positive effect of making cars smaller/weigh less. Idk.. I'm no expert.

    • @fedyx1544
      @fedyx1544 2 года назад +25

      @@adventurefaps9571 it's not dumb cause by directly banning ICE you're forcing manufacturers to divert their R&D money towards developing better batteries and EVs, which are unquestionably better for the environment than ICE ever will be. It's either allow them to keep producing ICE and get at best 20% cleaner vehicles or force them to produce 70% and upwards cleaner vehicles.

    • @liviuganea4108
      @liviuganea4108 2 года назад +54

      @@fedyx1544 Except the electricity they need is still produced by polluting the environment

  • @boreos3499
    @boreos3499 2 года назад +54

    As per usual, I am so thankful for the inclusion of indigenous and native land rights and domestic violence concerns in your videos. That holistic view of the entire cost/benefit analysis really sets your channel apart from other logistics channels.

    • @MrMediator24
      @MrMediator24 2 года назад +6

      Really sad to see people who contributed the least having to pay the most for climate change

  • @rationalcommentor
    @rationalcommentor 7 месяцев назад +1

    The thing is we need to advance the development of a battery to be more efficient and effective at the same time

    • @persona250
      @persona250 5 месяцев назад

      Did you no watch the video . Solid state batteries

  • @fladoodel
    @fladoodel 8 месяцев назад +1

    We aint runnin out of gas man

  • @lvkas9273
    @lvkas9273 2 года назад +9

    There is an option not mentioned in this video: lithium-battery recycling. During my masters me and a group of other students designed a battery recycling plant based on a German patent. We found that Lithium, Cobalt, Manganese, Nickel as well as Graphite can be extracted from used batteries with a very high purity and a pretty good return on investement for a plant in Germany. Just shortly after we found out that some companies started building more of these recycling plants. The good thing is that with increasing EV demand those kind of recycling plants become more profitable and I hope more large businesses and governments start to aid this development.

    • @davidca96
      @davidca96 2 года назад +3

      its a good idea, but wouldnt be nearly enough, we need to figure out battery technology using something else, such as sodium or aluminum batteries instead of sticking to lithium because its already shown lithium production is just no good for our planet at the levels required for "worldwide" electric vehicles.

    • @mastermnd22
      @mastermnd22 2 года назад +2

      The return on investment vs cost of extraction is going to be the problem. Unfortunately a lot of the battery packs are not ideally built for recycle.

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh 2 года назад +3

      Both Volkswagen and Renault have EV battery recycling plants. Others also exist, and are operational...

  • @dukeshaver199
    @dukeshaver199 2 года назад +135

    This was truly a wonderful thought-provoking video and I so appreciate you broaching the subject. Keep up the great work.

  • @Digital-xp8zl
    @Digital-xp8zl Год назад

    There’s a documentary on extracting it from the brine in California and there’s so much available it could provide the world supply of li ten times over, they’re in the process of making the extraction more convenient and less expensive, so I’d say in another 3-4 years production will be in full swing and usa will be the largest producer and exporter of lithium

  • @eonsprite6109
    @eonsprite6109 Год назад +2

    Here me out just hear me out
    instead of spending a ton of lithium on electric cars, we spend it on buses and trains that can carry way more people. For only a little more lithium.
    That way, we only really need electrical vehicles for things like ambulances, operation vehicles, firetrucks. etc etc.
    Also beyond that, we can also get around by these things called "feet" and "feet powered cars (aka bikes)".
    And for disabled people, well they can still have cars if they choose. As it would be to difficult for them to use cars or bikes. But wait, even then if its just them or maybe 1 other person, we could have really small electric vehicles that could travel on bike lanes (which we will also install because bikes are one of the best ways to travel.)

    • @joebrandon1730
      @joebrandon1730 Год назад

      Hear me out just hear me out
      I'm not taking a bus everywhere I go. I am not going to try to figure out how to get 2X4s, sheet rock and cement bags onto a bus or train. Cars only produce 16% of the world's total C02 emission. Industry produces 46% of the world's C02 emissions. I'm not trashing my entire way of living to not do anything. If you removed cars completely and ramped up public transportation guess what you'd accomplish? Nothing. The global C02 emissions from cars/buses would remain at 16%.

    • @eonsprite6109
      @eonsprite6109 Год назад +1

      @@joebrandon1730 here me out, when I say using public transit, I’m not talking about people who live in rural environments or constantly need to haul large things around,
      You know I’m not talking about you, so please don’t try to act like I’m talking about you

  • @Sentient.A.I.
    @Sentient.A.I. 2 года назад +261

    I dont agree with banning combustion engines but there should be more convenient options for public transit/work from home. This would make the lithium crunch more feasible. Also reduce gas prices as demand would shrink if we could cut daily drivers in half.

    • @1nicube
      @1nicube 2 года назад +44

      personnaly i hate the idea of banning IC engine when we dont have releable replacement. There is replacement fuel like porsche did. There is nitrogene IC engine. There is WAAAYYY more than CO2 in pollution but we only talk about CO2... CO2 can be treat with planting tree... landfill cant just disappear and most ressources arnt infinite ressources. We will run out of rare material like lithium pretty quick.

    • @scottg3192
      @scottg3192 2 года назад +10

      @@1nicube Banning the sale of new ones, you'll still be able to drive your ic engine and buy 2nd hand cars

    • @1nicube
      @1nicube 2 года назад +6

      @@scottg3192 i know?

    • @janhammekenbuch142
      @janhammekenbuch142 2 года назад +4

      Also, focusing on makin IC engines less polluting, or maybe stop polluting at all...

    • @1nicube
      @1nicube 2 года назад +7

      @@janhammekenbuch142 i am not saying to keep only 1.. im saying that electric car isnt our way out.
      Just keep those technology soo compagny continu to improve them and also make new type of vehicule like hydrogene or maybe other engine we didnt discover yet.

  • @jeramey3914
    @jeramey3914 2 года назад +7

    Excellent video Sam! This really is eye opening to what needs and what can be done to clean up Lithium battery production

  • @pablieto-veganson
    @pablieto-veganson 8 месяцев назад

    I've been hearing about solid state batteries for over a decade now.
    I'm still waiting.

  • @bingo7799
    @bingo7799 Год назад +1

    I like that this presentation faces the point that there are positives and negatives to most public environmental policies. Too often the negative side is swept under the rug out of sight.