Maybe we should stop having such a car-centric approach to "saving" the environment? One diesel bus can fit a 100 EV drivers, and one high speed train can fit as many as 1400 EV drivers! Imagine how much better that is for the environment!
like the video said, it’s not a silver bullet. EV cars are part of a solution but not all of it. it’s also a single from the bottom up that the public are shilling to switch, that helps with getting the energy cleaner at a country level
E-cars - just another way to convince us to carry on consuming regardless. The only tangible advantage is cleaner air in cities, which is not how they're selling it to us, is it? Congratulations dear people, you have been well and truly greenwashed by the unstoppable corporate-growth machine which can obviously never advise simply consuming far less.
Like anything in life, you dont have to buy one if you dont want to, no one is making you. But one day you will want to buy one, as they are superior product to burning stuff inefficiently to propel yourself along. There is a lot of FUD about at the moment, that people will see through, when they experience an EV for themselves, everyone is fearful of change but after driving EV's for over 6 years, I will never go back to driving an ICE car, it's too expensive, dirty and a complete faff to use one. One pedal driving as in a EV is the way forward
It's part of the reason I bought mine and another was my solar panels generate free energy to propel it around, so free motoring, plus it's faster than my mates Porsche 😂
@@stevehayward1854 Oh, come on... Everybody knows that the average ten square metres of solar panels on your roof won't run a car - well, unless you just go to Sainsbury's once a month! Or, have you got a football-pitch sized solar farm, perhaps?
@@davidpalk5010 I have been running my EV's for 6 years from my solar panels, in winter I do have to use grid power as well but it is still massively cheaper than running an ICE car, my Tesla does 5 miles on 1 kWh of electricity, thats just 4p a mile
Tesla started to move away from cobalt in batteries in the middle of 2020. Mainly because of cost rather than altruistic ambition, but hey, whatever helps.
I've known this for ten years and debated it. It's great that we can now put more evidence into the debate so that global problems can be adressed in a deductive manner.
@@GurungyNoHamuster So in other words, you don't believe how batteries are made and where the electricity to charge your car comes from??? Are batteries delivered by the battery stork???
@@h.mandelene3279does the fuel you use in your car appear by magic at the bowser? No, its pumped from 2 miles below ground, 100m barrels a day heated off rhe grid to 400°c pumped back and forth using electricity. 10% of global emissions is supertankers shipping it around the planet. Cobalt"s 6th largest user is the fuel industry as a desulpherisation catalyst the modern LFO batteries use no cobalt. Australia mines 50% of the worlds lithium and does not use child labour.
You're missing a few things about petrol/gas cars. The refinement of the oil into gas, the transportation of the gasoline, the storage of gasoline at petrol stations, the oil changes/ oil filters throughout the lifetime of the ICE car, the reduced efficiency of the gas car over time. Whereas EVs get cleaner overtime ( as we switch from coal to cleaner forms of power production), ICE cars get dirtier over time.
I just wanna say fuels that going into powerplant also have to be refined you have that same issue there as well and include power grid loss and your outlets losses as well. Now I agree ICE cars also getting less efficient as time goes by, but compare to Li batteries it is nothing. You also should take in account that for recharging an EV you have to stop way more often and it gonna take you 40 min to recharge your EV if every one use EV recharging EVs are going to become a nightmare. Right now refueling a combustion car gonna take around 5 min or less and we sometimes see huge lines, think if that was EVs.
@@hossein.m1912 I don't disagree with some of your points. But as we invent newer, better batteries and faster chargers some of these issues with EVs will get resolved.
@@JJs_playground There are limits to what we can achieve from a chemical engineering, electrical engineering, and mechanical engineering point of view. Until fusion becomes a thing, we're basically going to be limited by what we can produce.
@@hossein.m1912 EV batteries outlast the car and after they have finished a second life as energy storage, they can be recycled, can you do that with gas/diesel ?
@@hossein.m1912Stopping way more often? That doesn’t really equate to what friends with EVs tell me. “I rarely use a high speed charger, more than 95% of my charging is at home on a cheap overnight tariff” one friend told me. I can believe that. I have a diesel with a range of 500 miles, I rarely use more than a quarter of a tank on a journey, I am seriously calculating how much cheaper an EV will be to run.
We need to stop saying "if only we use public transport more". Public transport is a huge inconvenience for long journeys and is often cancelled or delayed, at least here in the UK, and it's particularly worse if you want to travel to somewhere rural. It's merely a pipe dream to believe we will realistically become a society that chooses public transport over our cars to go somewhere. Anyone who can afford a car is 8/9 times out of 10 going to use it to get themselves around vs public transport.
Can you imagine grandma riding a bicycle to go to the grocery store, in the rain or snow? It’s not feasible. I grew up in the country, I took a school bus, it took over an hour to cover 5 miles. if you’re on the early part of the route, it takes two hours.
I sort of disagree. I live in a rural area in the uk but often travel to cities. In rural area there is no public transportation sometimes anymore to villages. A car is kinda needed here as taxi often booked out way in advance . When i travel to the cities 90% of time i use public transport (train) For two reasons- its about 3.5 hour journey. Honestly id rather read a book or watch a movie than drive for that time. And 2 usually im there at least 1 night! That means a car is a bit of a burden as it requires a place to park which is hard to find and expensive, traffic can be stressful and can’t really enjoy a drink if im eating out. However that said- trains can have tight connection and run late, cancel, and be hot and jammed with people especially in summer. It can be a horrible journey. Also, the price of a train is dearer than driving, considerably if purchase ticket on day of travel (assuming i alreadt have a car for otger reasons). There is something very wrong when train is more than driving my own car.
No one talks about cruise-liners. If they are really serious about reducing emissions they would bad cruise-liners entirely. They have no use other than for entertainment and they are one of the biggest polluters in the world.
Stop lecturing us on personal responsibility when you jettison the chances of the only politicians to promote substantial initiatives on green, public transport alternatives.
CARB lies about the efficiency of EVs!!! In their ARB/MSD/7-6-94 they claim that battery efficiency is 80% and motor is 90%. These are LIES!!! Charging a battery in one hour is 5.88%. In 15 minutes it is only 0.3675%!!!! The motor efficiency depends on how many stops are made. Each tine it starts, the motor and system efficiency are almost ZERO!!!!
@@cinystarr4657 Lol. No, it's easily debunked non-scientific bs! Lomborg uses terrible cherry picked data and obviously flawed methodology, over and over. His books always get taken to pieces by actual scientists in the field.
@@michaelrch cherry picked data . wow, if that isn't what the entire left has been doing for eons lol. There's plenty more data that proves Electric isn't actually as green as they want us to believe it is. If you want a car just to putz around in & go grocery shopping, great, enjoy the battery
Yes, that was my reaction too -- though I had noticed a weird anti-EV line from the Gurdiran from a couple of years ago. It's bizarre -- I actually wondered whether it was taking bribes from the fossil fuel corps.
What part of a car is sent across ocreans to be refined before being sent back again? Do you understand how much worse for the environment bunker fuel is than petrol?
@@tylerbraegelmann8548 not really cos considering they are literally new technology with lots of potential for improvement, it’s only a matter of time before they make ice cars obsolete whether you like it or not
@@Right-Is-Right Do all countries produce crude oil and if not how do they get it and where from, how do you move diesel and patrol from refineries to patrol stations?
EVs create less brake pollution because they can use their engine to slow down. And it isn't the fault of the EV manufacturer that the grid isn't green. That is no argument against EVs. The economy has to dercarbonise, and electric cars are one piece of that puzzle. It's up to electricity providers to dercarbonise their product, not EV manufacturers.
Absolutely it’s rare occasions that I have to touch the brake in mine. The way the combined accelerator and regen brake works makes driving much smoother, so I can’t see the issues with additional weight. If you want to see that in action look at bus stops where the bus brakes you usually end up with a wave of tarmac and eventually a pit hole - as a cyclist I look out for these! With an ev you are never decelerating that hard because of the way the regen works.
@@zUJ7EjVD Go on, evidence that...provide a single EV without any regenerative braking? Some have stronger braking features than others granted. You can't discount vehicles without one pedal driving though.
Its not complicated EVs are greener than ice cars. They offset their carbon footprint in less than a year and won't produce any emissions ever. The life span of batteries can be over 15 years after that they can be used for 15-20 years as static storage before being recycled to get the rare elements back. Meanwhile petrol uses 90% of mined cobalt in it's desulphurisation process.
@@zUJ7EjVD I don't understand what you're saying? Its not hard to charge an ev. Also whats the point of buying a car if you drive afew times a year? There also more ev makers than tesla. You don't really need to repair evs that last a long time than you only need to replace the battery after like 20 years. Theres many third party places that do this in europe atleast.
It takes 2 years (realistically 2-3 years) to offset the carbon footprint. So those people that replace their cars every two years are causing more damage than any ICE driver. They do produce emissions - not at the car, but every time it's plugged in it's producing emissions. The UK will never be 100% renewable on energy (not possible with our weather, river sources etc). They're not the answer. In a few decades they'll be obsolete and will be replaced by the next fad.
@@nezudough2423 This is basic info at this point in fact my figures are very conservative compared to what we know now. What do you want a source on specifically? fully charged does great stuff on this.
modern VW disel engines are most perfect and clean automotive engine. Diselgate was just the way to move VW out of US market due to US industry was unable to create perfect disel below 3 liters volume.
@@wingswings1665 Finally, some common sense. Whole VW "scandal" was heavily sponsored/organised witch hunt against eu/german car industry, which win global and most importantly china market (biggest car market today) at that time and this was big no-no for american bankrupted car industry. On the other hand, if we get back to "emissions", diesel cars (whole brands combined, no just vw) represents about 1% of whole ice car spectrum in usa (they conveniently moved their domestic made 4-5l diesel pick-up etc into truck category, where different emission standards etc are used). And if we go even further, they use heaviest anti (car) diesel standards, that is used in California only, due to heavy pollution in L.A., which, as we can see is definitely done by that 0,5% euro vw diesel cars, lol. So, in the end, vw was "obligated" to pay biggest fine in history (over 40 billions, if i'm not mistaken), and move tens of thousands practically new vehicles into deserts etc, just so they have their "environmental" win. After that they realised, that wont do enough, since they're still no way compatible against other car industry, they went full mental with bev cars (aka musk), where eu was forced to have big monetisation for (only) their chargers onto highways, to let their factories being exclusive build into Germany without permits etc etc. All this because you know, environment..
For ICEs, you seem forget that every liter of gas also need electricity to manufacture, from oil rig station, processing and transporting to a gas station. And yes if it’s powered by coal power plant, it will release much more CO2 compared to EVs plus an emission every kilometer you drive.
True- just as about 62% of electricity generated is lost by the time it reaches your house. Then another 10-15% of energy is lost to charge your car. As the video says - this doesn't count likely your electricity is from a coal or nat gas power plant.
And seriously, are you going to complain about the problems of pay and conditions for mining of materials for batteries while totally ignoring the fact that this goes on at a scale orders of magnitude larger for the materials for producing ICE engines and the BILLIONS of tons of dirty fuel they use every year?! Yes, conditions for miners are often terrible, but that is common to all mining. The cause is capitalism, not batteries FFS.
Can you point to me the whereabouts of the oppressed child miner in the US? Any other western nation? In fact countries like Australia miners get paid very well.
@@Right-Is-Right That's not what I was getting at. There is a common trope used by fossil fuel shills that EVs require lots of mining and that the mining communities around the world, especially in Africa and Asia, have a horrible time and get paid next to nothing. This is actually true. But it's MORE true for fossil fuel extraction and the attendant mining than it is for mining for materials for batteries. So raising this issue is either catastrophically ignorant or it's a deliberately misleading attack on EVs. The most egregious example is criticism of mining for cobalt in the DRC. You hear this ALL THE TIME from people attacking EVs. What they fail to mention is that child labour in the DRC was tiny and has all but stopped now. But even while it was going on, the biggest buyer of that cobalt was,..... the fossil fuel industry!!!
May be the time has finally come for sodium iron batteries initially for low performance and grid storage. As and when the technology develops, we can use the same for other applications which require greater energy density.
Over 60% of the electricity feed into the grid is lost in conversion and transport. There is nothing green here, the pollution is just centralized to the power station.
Discussing the impacts of battery production in relation to cars without even mentioning the massive environmental impact of fossil fuel production is ridiculous. This really isn’t that complicated. EVs are significantly better than ICE cars, and less or no cars are way better than both.
They even cite misinformation from a known fossil fuel shill and climate change denier, in a Murdoch paper, at 3:00 This video is straight up misinformation.
You missed the part where EV's running on electricity produed from natural ga sstill output 76% of carbon diozxide as a comparable car nd that was just one study, to make that "yes EV;s do create less CO2 than petrol and diesel cars over their lifecycle' is a huge a stretch that has to ignore the CO2 of coal powered power stations.
@@Right-Is-Right Where are you getting those figures?? Planet of the Humans or perhaps Exxon Mobil themselves? Have you just tried googling EV lifetime carbon emissions ? The studies all cite reductions over around 50% or more. Check the CarbonBrief article on this. They are very reliable. "Factcheck: how electric vehicles help to tackle climate change" from 2019. And the situation is getting better every day as renewables displace fossil fuels, especially coal, on grids around the world.
@@michaelrch where did I get the figure from? why did you not watch the video or read what I typed? and no, i am not going to Carbon Brief, they are, well self professed left wing. Seriously their 'Director and editor' is a ex guardian employee, who has never even studied science, even though he was given an honorary geology degree for his climate change shilling.
What happens to the batteries when they no longer hold enough charge? This is a critical aspect of the EV carbon and environmental impact which is seldom mentioned.
@@brunoyudi9555 Those batteries are almost completely recycled. When you buy a new battery, they take your old one in trade for recycling. If you don't leave your old battery the final price for the new one is quite a bit more.
Problem with “green” energy is that it’s not environmentally clean. The heavier lithium battery cars wear tires out faster creating more airborne particle pollution. The heavy metals despoil the environment in their mining and eventual disposal with highly toxic minerals. They also require energy to be charged - most often fossil fuel energy. Hydrogen might be a far better solution. On the other hand microplastics, pesticides and pharmaceuticals pose a genuine threat to human survival.
Yeah its really lucky that ICE vehicles don't need any mining or refining of materials at any stage in their life 🤣 Who's using fossil fuels to charge their EV in 2024?? Also if you don't have green electricity where are you planning to get environmentally friendly H2 from? 🤔
Also is anyone going to mention that fuel refineries are the largest consumers of cobalt by weight globally. Which use it to remove sulphur from petrol and diesel? No? Nobody?
It takes many years to recover the price of an electric vehicle against a normal car , and after those years the battery probably needs replacement , which is the most polluting( in production ) and expensive part of an EV. Also where and how is the electricity generated , as much of the world uses coal , gas etc and this is even more polluting
As I was scrolling through the comments ,what catches my attention is the lack of Public transportation in rural areas of Western countries .I was a student in Cardiff University, Wales, UK 20 years back. I would have loved to do an assignment based out of a rural outskirt in Wales. I fixed everything but later discovered that there is no public transport anywhere near. Using private transport was not affordable to me and so I dropped it. For Chevening scholars they provided only public transport reimbursements. Coming from India, it was a surprise that there was no public transport in rural UK as we have far better public transport in rural India, even 20 years before. Of-course the quality of it varies, but we a lower income nation can manage with it and that keeps moving us. As of now even in the remote corners , especially in flat Indo-Gangetic terrains though many other things are to be improved, you have Electric powered basic public transport, though rudimentary. This may be the scenario in most of Africa , Latin America and Asia in general.
“Higher particle emissions from tire wear according to some study” - according to one study.. one thoroughly debunked study that didn’t even use EV’s in said study.
Wasn't that the study where the main takeaway point was that aggressive driving style contributes way more than vehicle weight? Like, order of magnitude more difference. So if you care about tyre wear, the important factor is braking, accelerating & cornering gently.
Truth is i don't care. All i care about is that EVs arent taxed as much as gas cars, so they cost about the same to buy, road tax on EVs is 3 times cheaper, and electricity is on average 4 times cheaper compared to gas with reasonable fuel economy. Considering i dont drive very far, it's a great alternative purely on budget consideration.
The answer is ABSOLUTELY YES!!! Fact, 70,250,400 electric cars can be powered a month by the energy used a month to pump just the oil that is used in the manufacture of THE FUEL the internal combustion vehicles use out of the ground alone in the US and offshore!!! now add the manufacture of fossil fuel and getting the fuel to the pumps! and all of that is before it is even burned in the internal combustion engine and 70% of that energy is wasted heat before that pollution even comes out of the tailpipe! :eek:
you use train, which use electricity, which use the public power grid, which has the same "green" issue as using an EV by possibly relying on fossil power plants... China use hydrogen fuel buses, which use electric to generate liquid hydrogen, which use the public power grid, which has the same "green" issue as using an EV...
This is something that nobody talks about. The Guardian reported that In Norway, which has the world's highest proportion of electric cars sales, there are between four and five times more fires in petrol and diesel cars. The Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency found that the were 3.8 fires per 100,000 electric or Hybrid in 2022 compared with 68 fires per 100,000 cars when taking all fuel types into account. Australia's EV FireSafe found there was a 0.0012% chance of a passenger electric vehicle battery catching fire, compared with a 0.1% chance for internal combustion engine fire. The chance of survival in a EV is very high as the car smokes for quite sometime before it combusts which gives the occupants time to get out of the vehicle and clear the area. Gas and Diesel vehicles are highly combustible which gives the occupants far less time to exit the vehicle which makes far less safe as your EV counterparts
That’s what I am doing - reducing my unnecessary car journeys and walking/cycling or getting public transport. I just don’t see how the UK replaces 35m ICE vehicles with just EVs. Especially with the lack of infrastructure and Grid not being able to cope. Either cut down - too many cars on roads or replace with Hybrids is the other solution. Think about when you use the car or share/borrow get taxis (they need to be green.)
The grid can cope. We use less energy today than we did in 2002 due to energy efficiency of items produced today. If all cars switched to EV today it would only increase by 10%
It's not only about changing the type of energy we use but how we use it. The whole oil extraction, processing, distribution and usage are extremely inefficient. Well generating electricity efficiency can't depend, using a EV motor to use that energy is vastly more energy efficient then burning gas!
There is nothing green about an electric car. They're great though. So comfortable and modern. But no one should be dumb enough to pretend they're saving the planet by driving a Tesla.
In the United States, utilities have retired hundreds of coal plants over the last decade and shifted to a mix of lower-emissions natural gas, wind and solar power. As a result, researchers have found, electric vehicles have generally gotten cleaner, too. And they are likely to get cleaner still.Nov 9, 2021 From New York Times
Considering you would need to drive one for around 30,000 miles before it becomes “greener” than a typical ice car it’s a lot better. And that’s without taking into account the number of lives you could save through clean air.
@@viralclipsnvids Then you would need to buy another EV much sooner than ICE and you would increase the demand for electricity (electricity sources pollute depending where you live) and in the US (I'm not sure about other countries) some states are having issues with the electric grid being overloaded.
This makes me want to ditch my Guardian subscription, after decades. - Really, G. you are "just asking questions" too? Like Faux News? - Hand-wringing over lithium and cobalt mining while ignoring all the cobalt used in petrol refining? Compared with the humanitarian and environmental impacts of petrol? Perleeze! - Material resources have to be transported? You don't say! Ditto _everything_ else! - And let's not forget to mention that old canard "particulates from tyre and brake wear" (but let's not mention that EV's rarely use friction brakes, eh?). - "In fact, one study found... blah blah blah" - but where is the citation? There's no way we can check the methods and conclusions from that "one study," , is there? Useless. Yes, we should all drive less. Yes, we should all drive smaller, more efficient cars. But many people will need to drive, so they should drive electric, asap. Once EVs are in the majority and it become socially unacceptable to drive a combustion vehicle, then we'll quickly get to 100% electric and a cleaner transportation future. But by posting this, you are delaying the transition. And that's barely forgivable.
@@riddhimaansenapati5006 Is it, though? It seems to me to be a thinly-disguised attack based on half-truths and received wisdom (also: giving many people what they want to hear). I'm about to get on my bicycle to go to work (only 12 miles) but G.'s stance on EVs is not supportable. It's disingenuous. If you're going to list out all the secondary issues with EVs, you HAVE to do the same for ICE. Go look at Gas Troll to get some idea of just how far G. is sinking into smartass whataboutery here. Sheesh!
@@Qatari2007 So they should grow wings? You can't bike everywhere (sadly). I think Bolivia has the right idea: person-sized electric cars are use-case appropriate.
I'm tired of false informations on EVs. Come one "the guardian"... Its not "complicated" : EVs are multiple times cleaner than ICE vehicules during the whole lifecycle. And you make many errors in this video : - EVs produce far less brake particule due to their regenerative braking - at the time of your video, the mass market was already flooded with Lfp batteries with no Cobalt in it. And at the same time your forget to mention that ICE consume a lot of cobalt with their filters and petrol production - then you say that environnemental impact of EVs depends on the electricity production type and it's true. But you forget to mention that even with coal produced electricity, an EV will still be far better because of its efficiency. In fact the ICE is just a waste of power. And yes we need to drop the number of cars in general. But EVs are 2 to 7 times better than ICE. So it's not "complicated"...
One thing that is not mentioned is the plan by governments to charge EV drivers a road user fee to pay for roading infrastructure. Currently this is poorly funded by fuel taxes. EV drivers are still getting a free ride.
What about batteries waste?, can damaged batteries be recycled?, what about the radiation produced by batteries in electric vehicles?, are really biofuels and hydrofuels not environmentally friendly?
When I saw "air fuel synthesis" 11 years ago I thought to myself "yay, that's climate change and sustainable energy sorted forever", because generating renewable energy is largely a solved problem, but storing it in vast quantities for hard-to-electrify applications wasn't. Just converting the renewable energy into the form we conveniently use it in was obviously *the answer*. And then it disappeared! Electric and human-powered transport are the obvious solutions for transport's urban air pollution issue, but beyond that a mix is needed that also supplants fossil-origin carbon for things like plastics manufacturing. Only hydrocarbon synthesis gives that, and it's being rejected by silly 'decarbonisation' which is throwing out the baby with the bathwater. There's nothing inherently wrong with the carbon chemistry the world works on, only with the source of the carbon we've been using. No vehicle or other product is 'net zero' until it's made from raw materials which are themselves net zero. The only way we can do that is to 'cut and shut' our economy at the refinery output stage, so that all those hydrocarbons come instead from air-captured carbon and renewable energy. If we do that, all downstream industry and applications are net zero too. Tailpipes, gas CH, and plastic sporks too, all net zero.
Considering the latest studies show that tire dust releases thousands times more air polluting than tailpipes, those heavy EV eating tires should really not be allowed on the road.
Hmm, we never seemed to mind SUVs like range rovers being heavier and emitting more tire particulates, before EVs came along, it's almost at though this is "Selective Outrage" designed to focus people's anger away from gasoline cars, like ignoring the cobalt used in Oil refining, and ignoring that some batteries don't use cobalt (Tesla SR+) but that some cobalt mining is bad, so your phone's battery is bad ... but, lets only call out EVs, and not mention some EVs don't use cobalt at all. Hmmmm. I wonder what's going on here then? Maybe this is The Guardian practising misinformation about EV's to keep their Oil and Gas advertisers happy? Huh. Of course, smart Guardian readers can see through this blatant distract and delay attempt to keep people in their gasoline cars ... right?
Public transportation was the way around once and I still believe it still is. Let's be frank, we are spoiled people who should have a car of our own but still want to present ourselves as environmental friendly. Yes, I am sure we are.
Evs have a simpler drive system, but a much more complex energy storage. Batteries have from hundreds to thousands of parts. A gas tank in a regular car has 2 parts, tank and pump. All theyve done is move the complexity
We could make the EVs much, much smaller, about the size of a 4 seat smart car for 90% of journeys, at no more than a tonne weight- eg Dacia Spring, small battery, light and charge at home. Noone needs s 2.5 tonne EV to go to the shops or school. They should be banned. Secondly, a lot less moving parts, but about a thousand times more electronic chips and relays that all need software updates all the time. It is absolutely clear (see Nissan) that software updates will be stopped after a few years, like with smartphones, where the life is about 5 years for updates, so the EV will have to be thrown away (recycled- which is energy intensive). My ICE car is 21 years old, never goes wrong and does 45mpg, it is far more carbon efficient than any current EV. No credit is given for this reality.
I think there is a false equivalency there that EVs are the big and heavy option and ICE is small and light. More people drive 2.5 tonne ICE vehicles than 2.5 tonne EVs and there are many EVS that are available right the way down to small
Question, if we quit using gasoline power, where will the material come from to produce tires and asphalt. We still end this stuff with electric cars, don't we?
NO. The oil companies are one of the biggest investors in the EV market. They have invested billions in EV charging stations, manufacturing charging equipment, EV software, partnership with electric car manufacturers etc. The big winners in the EV market are the oil companies.
This talks as though petrol is magic and magically turns up without effort at petrol stations. Petrol additionally using the likes of Cobolt. The power grid, sure, countries are cleaning up the power grid
A provocative and informative doc on the CO2 Pollution caused by Electric Vehicles (EV’s) during their construction, (especially of their Batteries and the rare metal used), and during their driving life; ofc the Pollution caused by driving an EV depends largely on how the Elec used to charge EV’s is generated !
It's still cleaner because the coal plants run at maximum efficiency to produce electricity vs your average minimally-maintained, inefficient petrol engine inside every car.
@@elmohead coal is literally never the answer. It's the worst of all options for fuel. Not a great deal of power, and absolutely disgusting for health and environment, from the mining through to the refinement and burning pollution. China's air quality is horrendous, especially for such a rich and developed country. Even scaling up nuclear for now is better, and increasing speed of transition toward renewables. Wind and solar still offer China vast untapped potential and low hanging fruit.
I think buying used cars and taking public transport when practical is the best option until governments provide clean electricity. It's much more sustainable to buy a one year old hybrid and use it for 10 years than ordering and building a new electric car every three years because there's a better model.
The last suggestion applies only to smaller European countries... But, for highly populated and larger countries of Asia and Africa, your suggestions are non relevant... EV manufacturing carbon emissions can be localized and control much easily than wide spread carbon emissions from fossil fuel vehicles and difficult to control... EV option has pros and cons but pros weighs more...
This is a funny assessment of costs and emissions. Any vehicle manufacturer can attest to the difficulty of sourcing and manufacturing raw materials and parts. All cars require foreign parts for manufacturing a vehicle assembly. Less parts equals less sourcing and material allocation. A more thorough investigation should be conducted with better data delivery to come to a consensus conclusion.
Typical gas vehicle is only 25%, 75% is wasted. Natural Gas combined cycle power plants are 50-60% efficient. So if you use a MWh a year in a car, you get 250 kwh of locomotion. You use a MWh combined cycle generator you get 550kwh, double the efficiency of the gas vehicle. There are small transmission losses to the EV charging station and the charging and discharging has small losses also so perhaps 80% more efficient. The Guardian should hire an electrical engineer to proof this story.
Even for power grids relying on fossil fuels, countries could adapt EV vehicles for long hauls as break-even pt (carbon footprint) can be done in say two years of 45,000 kms per year (125kms per day).
yes but what about when the battries inevatibly die and the range gets shorter and shorter, we are going to have piles of electric cars in perfect condition accept for the battries rotting for no reason, when car manufactors discontinue models will they stop producing that cars battry as well?
Maybe we should stop having such a car-centric approach to "saving" the environment? One diesel bus can fit a 100 EV drivers, and one high speed train can fit as many as 1400 EV drivers! Imagine how much better that is for the environment!
like the video said, it’s not a silver bullet. EV cars are part of a solution but not all of it. it’s also a single from the bottom up that the public are shilling to switch, that helps with getting the energy cleaner at a country level
Ifrs end the
Yes i think you deserve the first high speed train line right down your street
What is this common sense you speak off.
I wouldn't be seen dead on a bus
In Adelaide South Australia there has been an all electric solar powered bus for at least 15 years!
Where ??? in the city only ....
E-cars - just another way to convince us to carry on consuming regardless. The only tangible advantage is cleaner air in cities, which is not how they're selling it to us, is it? Congratulations dear people, you have been well and truly greenwashed by the unstoppable corporate-growth machine which can obviously never advise simply consuming far less.
You don't get clean air from a burning ev!
Like anything in life, you dont have to buy one if you dont want to, no one is making you. But one day you will want to buy one, as they are superior product to burning stuff inefficiently to propel yourself along.
There is a lot of FUD about at the moment, that people will see through, when they experience an EV for themselves, everyone is fearful of change but after driving EV's for over 6 years, I will never go back to driving an ICE car, it's too expensive, dirty and a complete faff to use one. One pedal driving as in a EV is the way forward
It's part of the reason I bought mine and another was my solar panels generate free energy to propel it around, so free motoring, plus it's faster than my mates Porsche 😂
@@stevehayward1854 Oh, come on... Everybody knows that the average ten square metres of solar panels on your roof won't run a car - well, unless you just go to Sainsbury's once a month! Or, have you got a football-pitch sized solar farm, perhaps?
@@davidpalk5010 I have been running my EV's for 6 years from my solar panels, in winter I do have to use grid power as well but it is still massively cheaper than running an ICE car, my Tesla does 5 miles on 1 kWh of electricity, thats just 4p a mile
Tesla started to move away from cobalt in batteries in the middle of 2020. Mainly because of cost rather than altruistic ambition, but hey, whatever helps.
And GM in 2019
BYD does the same now
@@Vilmir Tesla gets their Batteries from BYD these days
Didn't Renault do the same with the Megane E-tech?
@@terenceiutzi4003 😂😂 GM has moved away from EV's, they cant be called a serious EV manufacturer when they make so few EV's
I've known this for ten years and debated it. It's great that we can now put more evidence into the debate so that global problems can be adressed in a deductive manner.
What evidence? This video is simply a series of assertions. Let's have some real side-by-side comparisons.
@@GurungyNoHamuster So in other words, you don't believe how batteries are made and where the electricity to charge your car comes from??? Are batteries delivered by the battery stork???
@@GurungyNoHamuster If you watch the video you'll notice citations listed on the top left for what they are asserting
@@h.mandelene3279does the fuel you use in your car appear by magic at the bowser? No, its pumped from 2 miles below ground, 100m barrels a day heated off rhe grid to 400°c pumped back and forth using electricity. 10% of global emissions is supertankers shipping it around the planet. Cobalt"s 6th largest user is the fuel industry as a desulpherisation catalyst the modern LFO batteries use no cobalt. Australia mines 50% of the worlds lithium and does not use child labour.
So local manufacturing is the key, solar power and doing away with child labour would be the best things. One company cannot earn it all
You're missing a few things about petrol/gas cars. The refinement of the oil into gas, the transportation of the gasoline, the storage of gasoline at petrol stations, the oil changes/ oil filters throughout the lifetime of the ICE car, the reduced efficiency of the gas car over time.
Whereas EVs get cleaner overtime ( as we switch from coal to cleaner forms of power production), ICE cars get dirtier over time.
I just wanna say fuels that going into powerplant also have to be refined you have that same issue there as well and include power grid loss and your outlets losses as well. Now I agree ICE cars also getting less efficient as time goes by, but compare to Li batteries it is nothing. You also should take in account that for recharging an EV you have to stop way more often and it gonna take you 40 min to recharge your EV if every one use EV recharging EVs are going to become a nightmare. Right now refueling a combustion car gonna take around 5 min or less and we sometimes see huge lines, think if that was EVs.
@@hossein.m1912 I don't disagree with some of your points. But as we invent newer, better batteries and faster chargers some of these issues with EVs will get resolved.
@@JJs_playground
There are limits to what we can achieve from a chemical engineering, electrical engineering, and mechanical engineering point of view.
Until fusion becomes a thing, we're basically going to be limited by what we can produce.
@@hossein.m1912 EV batteries outlast the car and after they have finished a second life as energy storage, they can be recycled, can you do that with gas/diesel ?
@@hossein.m1912Stopping way more often? That doesn’t really equate to what friends with EVs tell me. “I rarely use a high speed charger, more than 95% of my charging is at home on a cheap overnight tariff” one friend told me. I can believe that.
I have a diesel with a range of 500 miles, I rarely use more than a quarter of a tank on a journey, I am seriously calculating how much cheaper an EV will be to run.
We need to stop saying "if only we use public transport more".
Public transport is a huge inconvenience for long journeys and is often cancelled or delayed, at least here in the UK, and it's particularly worse if you want to travel to somewhere rural.
It's merely a pipe dream to believe we will realistically become a society that chooses public transport over our cars to go somewhere. Anyone who can afford a car is 8/9 times out of 10 going to use it to get themselves around vs public transport.
Can you imagine grandma riding a bicycle to go to the grocery store, in the rain or snow? It’s not feasible.
I grew up in the country, I took a school bus, it took over an hour to cover 5 miles. if you’re on the early part of the route, it takes two hours.
@@majorburke9735Sounds like you'd have been better off nicking Grandma's bike to cover the 5 miles.
There are also many dangerous characters on public transit (at least here), to the point where it’s avoided as much as possible…
I sort of disagree. I live in a rural area in the uk but often travel to cities.
In rural area there is no public transportation sometimes anymore to villages. A car is kinda needed here as taxi often booked out way in advance .
When i travel to the cities 90% of time i use public transport (train)
For two reasons- its about 3.5 hour journey. Honestly id rather read a book or watch a movie than drive for that time.
And 2 usually im there at least 1 night! That means a car is a bit of a burden as it requires a place to park which is hard to find and expensive, traffic can be stressful and can’t really enjoy a drink if im eating out.
However that said- trains can have tight connection and run late, cancel, and be hot and jammed with people especially in summer. It can be a horrible journey.
Also, the price of a train is dearer than driving, considerably if purchase ticket on day of travel (assuming i alreadt have a car for otger reasons).
There is something very wrong when train is more than driving my own car.
No one talks about cruise-liners. If they are really serious about reducing emissions they would bad cruise-liners entirely. They have no use other than for entertainment and they are one of the biggest polluters in the world.
Not to mention they burn over 100,000 litres of fuel every trip they take!
@@Optimistprime.Per trip? The large cruise ships use 300,000 litres per *day*.
Stop lecturing us on personal responsibility when you jettison the chances of the only politicians to promote substantial initiatives on green, public transport alternatives.
The even cite a climate denier publishing his misinformation in a right wing Murdoch paper at 3:00
This video is misinformation.
CARB lies about the efficiency of EVs!!! In their ARB/MSD/7-6-94 they claim that battery efficiency is 80% and motor is 90%. These are LIES!!! Charging a battery in one hour is 5.88%. In 15 minutes it is only 0.3675%!!!! The motor efficiency depends on how many stops are made. Each tine it starts, the motor and system efficiency are almost ZERO!!!!
So the Guardian is now using a climate denier publishing in a Murdoch paper as a source at 3:00? 😱
What the F guys? Seriously.
Afraid other information might actually be correct?
@@cinystarr4657
Lol. No, it's easily debunked non-scientific bs! Lomborg uses terrible cherry picked data and obviously flawed methodology, over and over.
His books always get taken to pieces by actual scientists in the field.
@@michaelrch cherry picked data . wow, if that isn't what the entire left has been doing for eons lol. There's plenty more data that proves Electric isn't actually as green as they want us to believe it is. If you want a car just to putz around in & go grocery shopping, great, enjoy the battery
Yes, that was my reaction too -- though I had noticed a weird anti-EV line from the Gurdiran from a couple of years ago. It's bizarre -- I actually wondered whether it was taking bribes from the fossil fuel corps.
The extra tyre pollution has been debunked too…
Petrol cars have all the problems mentioned in this video related to EVs AND the fossil fuel problems.
What part of a car is sent across ocreans to be refined before being sent back again? Do you understand how much worse for the environment bunker fuel is than petrol?
exactly, so we should stop glamorizing EVs
@@tylerbraegelmann8548 not really cos considering they are literally new technology with lots of potential for improvement, it’s only a matter of time before they make ice cars obsolete whether you like it or not
@@viralclipsnvids EVs have been losing to ICE ever since the late 1800s
@@Right-Is-Right Do all countries produce crude oil and if not how do they get it and where from, how do you move diesel and patrol from refineries to patrol stations?
EVs create less brake pollution because they can use their engine to slow down. And it isn't the fault of the EV manufacturer that the grid isn't green. That is no argument against EVs. The economy has to dercarbonise, and electric cars are one piece of that puzzle. It's up to electricity providers to dercarbonise their product, not EV manufacturers.
I mean the grid is rapidly becoming green in 10 years the uk will get two thirds of its power from solely wind.
@@zUJ7EjVD All evs can regen brake and I haven't heard of any cons of that.
@@zUJ7EjVD Nonsense. It is an inherent feature of an electric motor.
Absolutely it’s rare occasions that I have to touch the brake in mine. The way the combined accelerator and regen brake works makes driving much smoother, so I can’t see the issues with additional weight. If you want to see that in action look at bus stops where the bus brakes you usually end up with a wave of tarmac and eventually a pit hole - as a cyclist I look out for these! With an ev you are never decelerating that hard because of the way the regen works.
@@zUJ7EjVD Go on, evidence that...provide a single EV without any regenerative braking?
Some have stronger braking features than others granted.
You can't discount vehicles without one pedal driving though.
Its not complicated EVs are greener than ice cars. They offset their carbon footprint in less than a year and won't produce any emissions ever. The life span of batteries can be over 15 years after that they can be used for 15-20 years as static storage before being recycled to get the rare elements back. Meanwhile petrol uses 90% of mined cobalt in it's desulphurisation process.
@@zUJ7EjVD I don't understand what you're saying? Its not hard to charge an ev. Also whats the point of buying a car if you drive afew times a year? There also more ev makers than tesla. You don't really need to repair evs that last a long time than you only need to replace the battery after like 20 years. Theres many third party places that do this in europe atleast.
It takes 2 years (realistically 2-3 years) to offset the carbon footprint. So those people that replace their cars every two years are causing more damage than any ICE driver.
They do produce emissions - not at the car, but every time it's plugged in it's producing emissions. The UK will never be 100% renewable on energy (not possible with our weather, river sources etc).
They're not the answer. In a few decades they'll be obsolete and will be replaced by the next fad.
Source?
@@nezudough2423 This is basic info at this point in fact my figures are very conservative compared to what we know now. What do you want a source on specifically? fully charged does great stuff on this.
Wasting most of the electricity by fast charging negates that. Charging in one hour is 5.55% efficient, in 15 minutes it is only 0.3675%!!!!
I just read that the Volkswagen ID Buzz doesn’t use cobalt.
you really believe Volkswagen after the diesel scandal?
modern VW disel engines are most perfect and clean automotive engine. Diselgate was just the way to move VW out of US market due to US industry was unable to create perfect disel below 3 liters volume.
@@wingswings1665 Finally, some common sense. Whole VW "scandal" was heavily sponsored/organised witch hunt against eu/german car industry, which win global and most importantly china market (biggest car market today) at that time and this was big no-no for american bankrupted car industry. On the other hand, if we get back to "emissions", diesel cars (whole brands combined, no just vw) represents about 1% of whole ice car spectrum in usa (they conveniently moved their domestic made 4-5l diesel pick-up etc into truck category, where different emission standards etc are used). And if we go even further, they use heaviest anti (car) diesel standards, that is used in California only, due to heavy pollution in L.A., which, as we can see is definitely done by that 0,5% euro vw diesel cars, lol.
So, in the end, vw was "obligated" to pay biggest fine in history (over 40 billions, if i'm not mistaken), and move tens of thousands practically new vehicles into deserts etc, just so they have their "environmental" win. After that they realised, that wont do enough, since they're still no way compatible against other car industry, they went full mental with bev cars (aka musk), where eu was forced to have big monetisation for (only) their chargers onto highways, to let their factories being exclusive build into Germany without permits etc etc. All this because you know, environment..
A lot of the big manufacturers don't use cobalt anymore and haven't for many years now. Even when this was released it was a mostly outdated practice.
For ICEs, you seem forget that every liter of gas also need electricity to manufacture, from oil rig station, processing and transporting to a gas station. And yes if it’s powered by coal power plant, it will release much more CO2 compared to EVs plus an emission every kilometer you drive.
True- just as about 62% of electricity generated is lost by the time it reaches your house. Then another 10-15% of energy is lost to charge your car. As the video says - this doesn't count likely your electricity is from a coal or nat gas power plant.
The loss depends on the charge time. in one hour the efficiency is 5.88%, in 15 minutes it is only 0.3675%!!!
And seriously, are you going to complain about the problems of pay and conditions for mining of materials for batteries while totally ignoring the fact that this goes on at a scale orders of magnitude larger for the materials for producing ICE engines and the BILLIONS of tons of dirty fuel they use every year?!
Yes, conditions for miners are often terrible, but that is common to all mining. The cause is capitalism, not batteries FFS.
🔥🔥
Can you point to me the whereabouts of the oppressed child miner in the US? Any other western nation? In fact countries like Australia miners get paid very well.
@@Right-Is-Right
That's not what I was getting at.
There is a common trope used by fossil fuel shills that EVs require lots of mining and that the mining communities around the world, especially in Africa and Asia, have a horrible time and get paid next to nothing. This is actually true. But it's MORE true for fossil fuel extraction and the attendant mining than it is for mining for materials for batteries. So raising this issue is either catastrophically ignorant or it's a deliberately misleading attack on EVs.
The most egregious example is criticism of mining for cobalt in the DRC. You hear this ALL THE TIME from people attacking EVs.
What they fail to mention is that child labour in the DRC was tiny and has all but stopped now. But even while it was going on, the biggest buyer of that cobalt was,..... the fossil fuel industry!!!
@@michaelrch correct... and the video ignored the fact that Tesla began moving away from cobalt in batteries in 2020.
May be the time has finally come for sodium iron batteries initially for low performance and grid storage. As and when the technology develops, we can use the same for other applications which require greater energy density.
Over 60% of the electricity feed into the grid is lost in conversion and transport. There is nothing green here, the pollution is just centralized to the power station.
Discussing the impacts of battery production in relation to cars without even mentioning the massive environmental impact of fossil fuel production is ridiculous.
This really isn’t that complicated. EVs are significantly better than ICE cars, and less or no cars are way better than both.
They even cite misinformation from a known fossil fuel shill and climate change denier, in a Murdoch paper, at 3:00
This video is straight up misinformation.
Public and collective transport is the only way into becoming an advanced and sustainable civilization
You missed the part where EV's running on electricity produed from natural ga sstill output 76% of carbon diozxide as a comparable car nd that was just one study, to make that "yes EV;s do create less CO2 than petrol and diesel cars over their lifecycle' is a huge a stretch that has to ignore the CO2 of coal powered power stations.
@@Right-Is-Right
Where are you getting those figures?? Planet of the Humans or perhaps Exxon Mobil themselves?
Have you just tried googling
EV lifetime carbon emissions
? The studies all cite reductions over around 50% or more.
Check the CarbonBrief article on this. They are very reliable.
"Factcheck: how electric vehicles help to tackle climate change" from 2019.
And the situation is getting better every day as renewables displace fossil fuels, especially coal, on grids around the world.
@@michaelrch where did I get the figure from? why did you not watch the video or read what I typed? and no, i am not going to Carbon Brief, they are, well self professed left wing. Seriously their 'Director and editor' is a ex guardian employee, who has never even studied science, even though he was given an honorary geology degree for his climate change shilling.
Let's use ecosia
Batteries are shipped, shock! Like if machine parts are not
not by trans ocean route, no.
Pun intended?
Lol you're right
I had an electric car when I was a young adolescent. It was called a power wheel. The battery was always going dead. lesson learned.
What happens to the batteries when they no longer hold enough charge? This is a critical aspect of the EV carbon and environmental impact which is seldom mentioned.
Petrol cars also got batteries that need to be properly discarded
Mountain or molehill?@@brunoyudi9555
@@brunoyudi9555 agreed but less, process than an EV batteries.
@@brunoyudi9555 Those batteries are almost completely recycled. When you buy a new battery, they take your old one in trade for recycling. If you don't leave your old battery the final price for the new one is quite a bit more.
EV batteries are either repurposed or recycled.
May be there should be a documentary on it backed with some data ! That will help in understanding better
There have been various.
This is one of the best in recent years.
Problem with “green” energy is that it’s not environmentally clean. The heavier lithium battery cars wear tires out faster creating more airborne particle pollution. The heavy metals despoil the environment in their mining and eventual disposal with highly toxic minerals. They also require energy to be charged - most often fossil fuel energy. Hydrogen might be a far better solution.
On the other hand microplastics, pesticides and pharmaceuticals pose a genuine threat to human survival.
Yeah its really lucky that ICE vehicles don't need any mining or refining of materials at any stage in their life 🤣 Who's using fossil fuels to charge their EV in 2024?? Also if you don't have green electricity where are you planning to get environmentally friendly H2 from? 🤔
Also is anyone going to mention that fuel refineries are the largest consumers of cobalt by weight globally. Which use it to remove sulphur from petrol and diesel? No? Nobody?
It takes many years to recover the price of an electric vehicle against a normal car , and after those years the battery probably needs replacement , which is the most polluting( in production ) and expensive part of an EV. Also where and how is the electricity generated , as much of the world uses coal , gas etc and this is even more polluting
As I was scrolling through the comments ,what catches my attention is the lack of Public transportation in rural areas of Western countries .I was a student in Cardiff University, Wales, UK 20 years back. I would have loved to do an assignment based out of a rural outskirt in Wales. I fixed everything but later discovered that there is no public transport anywhere near. Using private transport was not affordable to me and so I dropped it. For Chevening scholars they provided only public transport reimbursements. Coming from India, it was a surprise that there was no public transport in rural UK as we have far better public transport in rural India, even 20 years before. Of-course the quality of it varies, but we a lower income nation can manage with it and that keeps moving us. As of now even in the remote corners , especially in flat Indo-Gangetic terrains though many other things are to be improved, you have Electric powered basic public transport, though rudimentary. This may be the scenario in most of Africa , Latin America and Asia in general.
so saying is that mining lithium is more worse then gasoline.
1) there's no carbon in oil refining
2) there's no geopolitical conflict over oil
“Higher particle emissions from tire wear according to some study” - according to one study.. one thoroughly debunked study that didn’t even use EV’s in said study.
Wasn't that the study where the main takeaway point was that aggressive driving style contributes way more than vehicle weight? Like, order of magnitude more difference.
So if you care about tyre wear, the important factor is braking, accelerating & cornering gently.
Truth is i don't care. All i care about is that EVs arent taxed as much as gas cars, so they cost about the same to buy, road tax on EVs is 3 times cheaper, and electricity is on average 4 times cheaper compared to gas with reasonable fuel economy. Considering i dont drive very far, it's a great alternative purely on budget consideration.
Capping (or recapping) gas wells that leak methane (above ground & underwater) would be a worthy parallel persuit too.
The answer is ABSOLUTELY YES!!! Fact, 70,250,400 electric cars can be powered a month by the energy used a month to pump just the oil that is used in the manufacture of THE FUEL the internal combustion vehicles use out of the ground alone in the US and offshore!!! now add the manufacture of fossil fuel and getting the fuel to the pumps! and all of that is before it is even burned in the internal combustion engine and 70% of that energy is wasted heat before that pollution even comes out of the tailpipe! :eek:
And the huge depreciation of an EV.
And this is why we use the combustion engine to manufacture your electricity in ad plants. It’s not green. The only answer is to travel less.
you know, we are limited by technologies that do not pollute the air at all, but this is prohibited
"Water lost", "carbon created", what are you talking about? Water isn't lost. Carbon isn't created.
you use train, which use electricity, which use the public power grid, which has the same "green" issue as using an EV by possibly relying on fossil power plants... China use hydrogen fuel buses, which use electric to generate liquid hydrogen, which use the public power grid, which has the same "green" issue as using an EV...
This is something that nobody talks about. The Guardian reported that In Norway, which has the world's highest proportion of electric cars sales, there are between four and five times more fires in petrol and diesel cars. The Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency found that the were 3.8 fires per 100,000 electric or Hybrid in 2022 compared with 68 fires per 100,000 cars when taking all fuel types into account. Australia's EV FireSafe found there was a 0.0012% chance of a passenger electric vehicle battery catching fire, compared with a 0.1% chance for internal combustion engine fire. The chance of survival in a EV is very high as the car smokes for quite sometime before it combusts which gives the occupants time to get out of the vehicle and clear the area. Gas and Diesel vehicles are highly combustible which gives the occupants far less time to exit the vehicle which makes far less safe as your EV counterparts
We need proper public transport in urban areas and electric vehicles in rural areas.
In my city 4 million people use an ev everyday. It's called subway. Governments just should make life harder for car commuters.
3:53 Soviet Union have trolley electric bus
best use of electricy for transport, 100%. batteries are just another environmental problem.
@@izoytsure but the technology changes all the time.
That’s what I am doing - reducing my unnecessary car journeys and walking/cycling or getting public transport.
I just don’t see how the UK replaces 35m ICE vehicles with just EVs. Especially with the lack of infrastructure and Grid not being able to cope.
Either cut down - too many cars on roads or replace with Hybrids is the other solution. Think about when you use the car or share/borrow get taxis (they need to be green.)
The grid can cope. We use less energy today than we did in 2002 due to energy efficiency of items produced today. If all cars switched to EV today it would only increase by 10%
So basically a car that gets 40-50 mpg is king of low emissions
That is certainly what this fact free video wants you to think.
@@brushlessmotoring what fact free exactly? facts are facts.
It's not only about changing the type of energy we use but how we use it. The whole oil extraction, processing, distribution and usage are extremely inefficient. Well generating electricity efficiency can't depend, using a EV motor to use that energy is vastly more energy efficient then burning gas!
this helped for my essay 👍
They not green the batteries are a tome bomb waiting to go off
There is nothing green about an electric car. They're great though. So comfortable and modern. But no one should be dumb enough to pretend they're saving the planet by driving a Tesla.
In the United States, utilities have retired hundreds of coal plants over the last decade and shifted to a mix of lower-emissions natural gas, wind and solar power. As a result, researchers have found, electric vehicles have generally gotten cleaner, too. And they are likely to get cleaner still.Nov 9, 2021
From New York Times
I mean they still are better than ICEVs, though they certainly are no saints
100% agree!
Considering you would need to drive one for around 30,000 miles before it becomes “greener” than a typical ice car it’s a lot better. And that’s without taking into account the number of lives you could save through clean air.
@@viralclipsnvids Then you would need to buy another EV much sooner than ICE and you would increase the demand for electricity (electricity sources pollute depending where you live) and in the US (I'm not sure about other countries) some states are having issues with the electric grid being overloaded.
This makes me want to ditch my Guardian subscription, after decades.
- Really, G. you are "just asking questions" too? Like Faux News?
- Hand-wringing over lithium and cobalt mining while ignoring all the cobalt used in petrol refining? Compared with the humanitarian and environmental impacts of petrol? Perleeze!
- Material resources have to be transported? You don't say! Ditto _everything_ else!
- And let's not forget to mention that old canard "particulates from tyre and brake wear" (but let's not mention that EV's rarely use friction brakes, eh?).
- "In fact, one study found... blah blah blah" - but where is the citation? There's no way we can check the methods and conclusions from that "one study," , is there? Useless.
Yes, we should all drive less. Yes, we should all drive smaller, more efficient cars. But many people will need to drive, so they should drive electric, asap. Once EVs are in the majority and it become socially unacceptable to drive a combustion vehicle, then we'll quickly get to 100% electric and a cleaner transportation future. But by posting this, you are delaying the transition. And that's barely forgivable.
No, they should not drive electric, and people shouldn’t have smaller cars!
Not really the purpose of the video is to say these EVs are not a silver bullet.
@@riddhimaansenapati5006 Is it, though? It seems to me to be a thinly-disguised attack based on half-truths and received wisdom (also: giving many people what they want to hear). I'm about to get on my bicycle to go to work (only 12 miles) but G.'s stance on EVs is not supportable. It's disingenuous. If you're going to list out all the secondary issues with EVs, you HAVE to do the same for ICE. Go look at Gas Troll to get some idea of just how far G. is sinking into smartass whataboutery here. Sheesh!
@@Qatari2007 So they should grow wings? You can't bike everywhere (sadly). I think Bolivia has the right idea: person-sized electric cars are use-case appropriate.
The video seems to me to be designed to provide a social license to keep driving gas cars. Boo!
Are EV's green? Yes.
Is our Grid green, and ready for EV's ? NO.
Nothing is green.
real green technologies are banned by, whom?
It’s clear that the starting point is reducing car use.
I'm tired of false informations on EVs. Come one "the guardian"... Its not "complicated" : EVs are multiple times cleaner than ICE vehicules during the whole lifecycle. And you make many errors in this video :
- EVs produce far less brake particule due to their regenerative braking
- at the time of your video, the mass market was already flooded with Lfp batteries with no Cobalt in it. And at the same time your forget to mention that ICE consume a lot of cobalt with their filters and petrol production
- then you say that environnemental impact of EVs depends on the electricity production type and it's true. But you forget to mention that even with coal produced electricity, an EV will still be far better because of its efficiency. In fact the ICE is just a waste of power.
And yes we need to drop the number of cars in general. But EVs are 2 to 7 times better than ICE. So it's not "complicated"...
One thing that is not mentioned is the plan by governments to charge EV drivers a road user fee to pay for roading infrastructure. Currently this is poorly funded by fuel taxes. EV drivers are still getting a free ride.
What about batteries waste?, can damaged batteries be recycled?, what about the radiation produced by batteries in electric vehicles?, are really biofuels and hydrofuels not environmentally friendly?
Lithium can't be recycled full stop
@@BUNCHOFLOSERSYOUARE-sg8wlYes it can, and is.
3:45 that’s what I’ve been saying
When I saw "air fuel synthesis" 11 years ago I thought to myself "yay, that's climate change and sustainable energy sorted forever", because generating renewable energy is largely a solved problem, but storing it in vast quantities for hard-to-electrify applications wasn't. Just converting the renewable energy into the form we conveniently use it in was obviously *the answer*. And then it disappeared!
Electric and human-powered transport are the obvious solutions for transport's urban air pollution issue, but beyond that a mix is needed that also supplants fossil-origin carbon for things like plastics manufacturing. Only hydrocarbon synthesis gives that, and it's being rejected by silly 'decarbonisation' which is throwing out the baby with the bathwater. There's nothing inherently wrong with the carbon chemistry the world works on, only with the source of the carbon we've been using.
No vehicle or other product is 'net zero' until it's made from raw materials which are themselves net zero. The only way we can do that is to 'cut and shut' our economy at the refinery output stage, so that all those hydrocarbons come instead from air-captured carbon and renewable energy. If we do that, all downstream industry and applications are net zero too. Tailpipes, gas CH, and plastic sporks too, all net zero.
Electric vehicles: Can 'lightweighting' combat range anxiety?
The only way to reduce weight is fewer batteries. This means a shorter range!!!
Well no they are not ... Proven 😂😂😂
“We have the technology but not the political will to use it” that part.
Do ont worry. I wont ever be switching
The battery production is not a one time thing. You'd need more batteries per car
Considering the latest studies show that tire dust releases thousands times more air polluting than tailpipes, those heavy EV eating tires should really not be allowed on the road.
Hmm, we never seemed to mind SUVs like range rovers being heavier and emitting more tire particulates, before EVs came along, it's almost at though this is "Selective Outrage" designed to focus people's anger away from gasoline cars, like ignoring the cobalt used in Oil refining, and ignoring that some batteries don't use cobalt (Tesla SR+) but that some cobalt mining is bad, so your phone's battery is bad ... but, lets only call out EVs, and not mention some EVs don't use cobalt at all.
Hmmmm. I wonder what's going on here then? Maybe this is The Guardian practising misinformation about EV's to keep their Oil and Gas advertisers happy?
Huh. Of course, smart Guardian readers can see through this blatant distract and delay attempt to keep people in their gasoline cars ... right?
@@brushlessmotoring I don't know in what cave you have been living where you haven't seen campaigns against SUV.
@@sophieedel6324 not from a tire particulates perspective though - that seems to be new and pointed only at EVs.
Public transportation was the way around once and I still believe it still is. Let's be frank, we are spoiled people who should have a car of our own but still want to present ourselves as environmental friendly. Yes, I am sure we are.
Not so green when the car is a write off after a couple of scraps on the bottom of the car
Have to include all the fires - ships sinking , factory disasters .
Climate change isn't a burden that the average citizen has to shoulder.
Please include the environmental damage caused by a burning ev
Offset by the 100 times more likely fire in ICE vehicles.
Evs have a simpler drive system, but a much more complex energy storage. Batteries have from hundreds to thousands of parts. A gas tank in a regular car has 2 parts, tank and pump. All theyve done is move the complexity
Cons about Ecars
Cold/ snow
Fires
charging time
Expensive batteries
the grid
Pollution
no balls
Pros about Ecars
no gas usage
Depends on color type.
We could make the EVs much, much smaller, about the size of a 4 seat smart car for 90% of journeys, at no more than a tonne weight- eg Dacia Spring, small battery, light and charge at home. Noone needs s 2.5 tonne EV to go to the shops or school. They should be banned. Secondly, a lot less moving parts, but about a thousand times more electronic chips and relays that all need software updates all the time. It is absolutely clear (see Nissan) that software updates will be stopped after a few years, like with smartphones, where the life is about 5 years for updates, so the EV will have to be thrown away (recycled- which is energy intensive). My ICE car is 21 years old, never goes wrong and does 45mpg, it is far more carbon efficient than any current EV. No credit is given for this reality.
I think there is a false equivalency there that EVs are the big and heavy option and ICE is small and light. More people drive 2.5 tonne ICE vehicles than 2.5 tonne EVs and there are many EVS that are available right the way down to small
Question, if we quit using gasoline power, where will the material come from to produce tires and asphalt. We still end this stuff with electric cars, don't we?
1. Population degrowth(800 billion to 400 billion and so on)
2. End of consumerism
No doubt this video was sponsored by the oil companies.
This is so obviously sponsored by an oil corporation
NO. The oil companies are one of the biggest investors in the EV market. They have invested billions in EV charging stations, manufacturing charging equipment, EV software, partnership with electric car manufacturers etc. The big winners in the EV market are the oil companies.
Anyways, the s15 silvia is a great car
This talks as though petrol is magic and magically turns up without effort at petrol stations. Petrol additionally using the likes of Cobolt. The power grid, sure, countries are cleaning up the power grid
flywheel-belt batteries are cheaper, there are cars with a flywheel battery by David Rabenhorst
A provocative and informative doc on the CO2 Pollution caused by Electric Vehicles (EV’s) during their construction, (especially of their Batteries and the rare metal used), and during their driving life; ofc the Pollution caused by driving an EV depends largely on how the Elec used to charge EV’s is generated !
Co2 is not a pollutant.
Great! So China has the most electric buses but their electricity is mostly from coal. That makes sense
It's still cleaner because the coal plants run at maximum efficiency to produce electricity vs your average minimally-maintained, inefficient petrol engine inside every car.
@@elmohead coal is literally never the answer. It's the worst of all options for fuel. Not a great deal of power, and absolutely disgusting for health and environment, from the mining through to the refinement and burning pollution. China's air quality is horrendous, especially for such a rich and developed country. Even scaling up nuclear for now is better, and increasing speed of transition toward renewables. Wind and solar still offer China vast untapped potential and low hanging fruit.
A horse 🐎 is the silver bullet
I think buying used cars and taking public transport when practical is the best option until governments provide clean electricity.
It's much more sustainable to buy a one year old hybrid and use it for 10 years than ordering and building a new electric car every three years because there's a better model.
Hybrids are the answer!! They don't waste electricity by fast charging, don't have a range problem and greatly reduce fuel consumption.
The last suggestion applies only to smaller European countries... But, for highly populated and larger countries of Asia and Africa, your suggestions are non relevant... EV manufacturing carbon emissions can be localized and control much easily than wide spread carbon emissions from fossil fuel vehicles and difficult to control... EV option has pros and cons but pros weighs more...
Carbon accounting should not be trusted until it's regulated. I can only imagine how these activists "measure".
Cycling and walking??? What if it rains?!!!
Umbrella
people around europe etc (especially on north) do cycling in rain, snow, you name it. laziness is only reason here, stop with bs,
1 ton of lithium mined = 5 to 15 tons of carbon
How much carbon am i produ ting as i smoke my cigarette while watching this video
Higher airparticles from tires and brakes? Man the trash carcompanies are grasping at straws, eh?
Use sodium ion batteries instead of lithium
We have the solution. Our motors are highly efficient and can compete with electric cars in most cases.
So the worst case is EVe save 24% emissions.
EV s are NOT CLEAN AT ALL.
Cars are not clean at all. So...?
Yeah 20-80% for fossil fuel car efficiency ! Say a true
Wow only 25% less carbon pollution from an EV charged up on coal generated electricity. 25% that's barely an improvement at all geez only 25%.
This is a funny assessment of costs and emissions. Any vehicle manufacturer can attest to the difficulty of sourcing and manufacturing raw materials and parts. All cars require foreign parts for manufacturing a vehicle assembly. Less parts equals less sourcing and material allocation. A more thorough investigation should be conducted with better data delivery to come to a consensus conclusion.
To change 'the collective mind' is much more difficult than to change technologies. It simply cannot be done. Evolution marches on.
Don't forget about Congo😢😢😢😢😢
Typical gas vehicle is only 25%, 75% is wasted. Natural Gas combined cycle power plants are 50-60% efficient. So if you use a MWh a year in a car, you get 250 kwh of locomotion. You use a MWh combined cycle generator you get 550kwh, double the efficiency of the gas vehicle. There are small transmission losses to the EV charging station and the charging and discharging has small losses also so perhaps 80% more efficient. The Guardian should hire an electrical engineer to proof this story.
But with today's lithium-ion batteries, EVs can go so far.
Even for power grids relying on fossil fuels, countries could adapt EV vehicles for long hauls as break-even pt (carbon footprint) can be done in say two years of 45,000 kms per year (125kms per day).
You stil lie about the ev-s but it's the guardian we talk about...
yes but what about when the battries inevatibly die and the range gets shorter and shorter, we are going to have piles of electric cars in perfect condition accept for the battries rotting for no reason, when car manufactors discontinue models will they stop producing that cars battry as well?