I'm going to disagree with this article, the problem is that people are going to buy what they want to buy, if you wanted to reduce emissions the most you would use a bike or public transport. Tesla already has the Model 3 and Model Y, both the best selling cars in their class. But some people are just going to want to drive trucks or large cars. This isn't an issue for car makers to fix, it is an issue for governments to fix, such as for example tax cars based on weight. Then less people would drive larger cars. Otherwise, all you are going to see is just more ICE trucks and SUVs
The only thing is BEVs are a bit too early for trucks. I think that RAM EREV/PHEV is a better choice for now. Of course if Tesla does manage a 500 mile cybertruck and can get charging speeds fast enough it should manage fine
As for EVs emitting 40% more during their manufacturing, the problem is that is based on "average" correct? And most EVs are ICE cars with batteries. As more EVs move to EV only platforms optimized for EVs that will change. Supply chains will also be optimized for EVs. Even more so once the supplychain starts moving away from fossil fuels as well
Overall, the report you linked is based on the polestar which is made in china. If you look at Tesla's impact report, despite the Chinese factory being more efficient and improved vs the US factory, it emits almost double the emissions during manufacturing.
According to Tesla's 2021 impact report, a Tesla Model 3 made in US emits 10.2 tonnes of CO2e during manufacturing, while a Tesla Model 3 made in china emits 16.2 tonnes of co2e
In comparison, an ICE made in US emits 9.6 tonnes of CO2e during manufacturing, and one made in China emits 12.6 tonnes of CO2e.
Aka, if you compare an EV made in China vs an ICE made in US, you get that 40%. But when you compare an EV made in US vs ICE made in US, the difference is closer to 6%. And I'd like to see when the Texas factory data is out which included the improvements from the china factory and more. I'd venture it would break even or be even less
Quote from: JohnIL on November 15, 2023, 20:02:40Of course governments jumped onboard EV's with unrealistic mandates to satisfy climate activist. Now we see a lot of general public rejecting EV's outright as having too many negatives to consider. What should happen is a gradual adoption of EV's maybe requiring a auto maker to have at least one EV with a reasonable range. Then begin a implementation that requires all vehicles using a combustion engine to have a hybrid electrical drive train that can help reduce emissions. Clearly we need a more acceptable and realistic adoption of EV's then what we have now.
Mandates to all EV's just will not work with what is happening now in EV technology and its infrastructure build up. It will only serve to frustrate those who invest in EV's and create more negative opinions about them.
Where do you get the idea of the public rejecting EVs? So far EV sales in US were 5.8% in 2022, the fastest growing market. 2023 is likely to break 7 or 8%. EU EV sales in 2022 already broke 20%, China's EV sales in 2022 were 29%. Both see 2023 EV sales growing. Rapid growth is a weird way to say rejecting. The media just likes to pretend growing rapidly slightly less for 1 quarter somehow means stalling.
As for your statement of unrealistic mandates, please point me to 1 place with unrealistic mandates. The mass media just misrepresents everything. For example, take one of the so called most strictest mandate, the California EV mandate. The media will pretend like the mandate requires all new cars to be 100% electric, but that is false. The CA mandate allows PHEVs, if you don't know what a PHEV is, its a plugin hybrid, aka small electric range and combustion engine range extender. Of course the media doesn't tell you this
The US federal mandate is even less restrictive, it doesn't even require a single EV. EVs do make it easier to hit the mandates, but you can do it with 0 EVs.
Quote from: Julian M on November 15, 2023, 17:52:12It's funny how some are just realizing now that EVs have become just another market gimmick rather than an Earth-saving solution - I mean, with all the components and batteries and electronic sensors in there, that is runs off electricity is completely canceled out by the sheer footprint these things carry.
EVs are not there to save the planet, they're meant to save the car industry from its bad decisions.
It isn't completely cancelled out, EVs relative to ICE cars are much much cleaner. But that is just relative