The Green Alliance thinktank tells peers in the House of Lords the actor's views are "damaging" to the government's plans for phasing out petrol and diesel vehicles.
Cool, some numbers. First off, looking over your math, it looks correct, so that’s good. The article seems to be a bit confusing, however, or you’re taking a best case scenario they don’t approach in the article. It states that an EV takes 8.8 tons of co2 to produce. It later states, however, “However, a BEV (battery electric vehicle) produces less harmful emissions over its entire life. The study found that a medium-sized petrol or diesel car produces around 24 tonnes of CO2 versus a BEV’s 18 tonnes” this seems to imply to me that we shouldn’t keep emissions at 0 throughout the EV’s lifetime? I would assume this additional tonnage is from less-clean electrical generation methods and overall maintenance requirements.
If this is the case, it paints a bit different of a picture, more in line with what I said - that you should buy one if you’re going to buy a car anyway, and drive yours. What the numbers provided does give us now, though, is a point at which the sunk cost DOES become too large, and that seems to be a car in the age range of 10-15 years at present.
Please, if I’ve misunderstood something with the article, correct me, and thank you for the write up with sources.
Cool, some numbers. First off, looking over your math, it looks correct, so that’s good. The article seems to be a bit confusing, however, or you’re taking a best case scenario they don’t approach in the article. It states that an EV takes 8.8 tons of co2 to produce. It later states, however, “However, a BEV (battery electric vehicle) produces less harmful emissions over its entire life. The study found that a medium-sized petrol or diesel car produces around 24 tonnes of CO2 versus a BEV’s 18 tonnes” this seems to imply to me that we shouldn’t keep emissions at 0 throughout the EV’s lifetime? I would assume this additional tonnage is from less-clean electrical generation methods and overall maintenance requirements.
If this is the case, it paints a bit different of a picture, more in line with what I said - that you should buy one if you’re going to buy a car anyway, and drive yours. What the numbers provided does give us now, though, is a point at which the sunk cost DOES become too large, and that seems to be a car in the age range of 10-15 years at present.
Please, if I’ve misunderstood something with the article, correct me, and thank you for the write up with sources.
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