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14th February 2012, 07:50 PM #1Skwair2rownd
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Hybrid and electric vehicles - the answer or not???
After a hot sweaty morning sorting rubbish and doing a tip trip I sat down to recuperate and watch a bit of TV as I ate lunch.
I caught the end of some ABC program where the presenter was extolling the virtues of hybrid and EVs, how they were going to change everything and be so much better for the environment, how much quieter our cities would be, etc., etc., etc.
I've long held the view that if hybrid or EV is the way to go, then I will donate a bag of chaff to the hospital.
Hybrid vehicles have 50% more moving parts,they are much more expensive to build, there will be massive problems with the cost of battery disposal and replacement. At present the only known source of Lithium is in Bolivia, not a stable country politically
, and not a really y reliable supplier to even the present market.
As for pure electric vehicles there will be similar battery problems, and then there is the cost of setting up infrastructure _ including more power stations.
I don't think the head in the clouds supporters of these vehicles have thought things though at all.
Another point to consider is that some modern diesel cars are approaching, and even bettering the consumption figures of the Toyota Prius.
What do you think??
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14th February 2012, 09:56 PM #2Jim
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When they say such and such is the answer, it usually means that they don't understand what the question is. Does it really make sense to have cleaner traffic jams?
Cheers,
Jim
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14th February 2012, 10:14 PM #3
The whole battery thing will die off soon enough. It will be hydrogen cars that make their own electricity. That way you will pull into station and fill with hydrogen gas and drive off. Petrol station makes money, govt can tax it. and you don't need to wait for the recharge.
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14th February 2012, 10:55 PM #4
EV is going to be hard to beat for short runs and if you only run a shortish distance to work and leave it in the car park all day could probably survive on solar charge. Economical diesel will remain hard to beat on long runs, when it comes to economy. There are plenty of diesels that produce sub 6l/100k.
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14th February 2012, 11:37 PM #5GOLD MEMBER
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I'm not sure that the only Lithium source belongs to Bolivia. It's found in locations such as Australia, the America's and Europe, to name a few.
Broad Based Lithium Reserves
To answer your question, to rely one source of fuel for transportation is a major mistake as nothing is indefinite. Well, apart from the sun. In the very distant future I think the sun is our future and everything will be electric. This will be dependant upon advances in energy storage. Saying that, the must abundant atom around us, hydrogen, will be explored and used. Again, generating and storing hydrogen depends on electricity. An interesting conundrum.-Scott
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15th February 2012, 12:06 AM #6.
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I agree about the sun but not everything can be electric. Fighter planes and battle ships cannot currently store enough electrical energy for their needs. Perhaps the sun can be used to make a bio fuels ? and nuclear power will be increasingly competitive for big subs and battleships.
There is potential sufficient Li in the vicinity of deep ocean vents to warrant mining - cost will be high but as oil prices rise and land supplies become problematic it will probably one of the first metals to be mined from the ocean.
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15th February 2012, 02:11 AM #7
Electric/Hybrids aren't the answer.
On a per vehicle basis, they take a larger carbon footprint to manufacture than a standard gas-guzzler...
In effect, while they're more eco-friendly to drive and the individual new owners will see apparent eco-savings (Is there an echo in here? Echo? Eco! Eco... ) they have already cost more in production than these savings will ever redeem.
They have a place in that they at least get people thinking in the right direction, but that's all they are. An emotional feel-good device that will, hopefully, get people started down the right track.
Personally I'm watching hydrogen cell development with interest. Exxy, but I suspect that's the way we'll probably head. (I honestly can't see the Fuel Conglomerate plutocrats letting us get away from their stranglehold with 'fuel-less' vehicles.)
- Andy Mc
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15th February 2012, 08:35 AM #8Jim
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You're right Skew. There's a lot of feel good stuff to this debate. I wonder what the carbon footprint of some of the hi-tech push bikes is?
Cheers,
Jim
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15th February 2012, 10:00 AM #9
Actually that is another urban myth, over the life of your average car the embodded energy in production accounts for about 22% of its carbon footprint while a Prius is about 30% however over the life of both vehicles the prius will have a lower carbon footprint when all inputs are added up.
However a more efficient system is the diesel,electric hybrid running on bio fuel although the downside is particulate matter emmitted.
I'd agree that fuel cells including hydrogen cells are probably the next step up. We will not have sufficient available fossil fuel for the worlds car and transport fleets so the ongoing work on EV or whatever comes next is essential. The only unknown is the pace at which the technology is developed and then adopted by the market. We do not have any great alternative for either aviation or heavy transport as bio fuel simply will not have enough available land to grow crops for the raw material and will drive up food prices in the process. The US navy is currently attempting to lock in sources of bio fuels to help power its fleet, it is fairly obvious that they see fuel security as an issue.
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15th February 2012, 01:25 PM #10
Amazing, as part of my professional background Ive been involved in a few detailed Life Cycle Analysis studies. Always to the ISO 14040. It is an exhaustive process. Anyway the published results seem to produce more disagreement than agreement on the life cycle consumption of hybrids vs other cars. The mere punter will never know the truth Im afraid. We are in the realm of opinion. Having scanned the reports all seem to be written with the outcome in mind. So whats new?
I like my Prius, its my third. I have to agree that the powers that be wont allow us any other alternatives till they can tax it and make a return on it on an ongoing basis. That decision wont be made in Australia BTW.....
Solar energy can be stored in molten salt. There are some very promising power stations being tested in QLD and California. Invented by an Aussie who had to move overseas to get seed capital. We just dont know what will be invented next."We must never become callous. When we experience the conflicts ever more deeply we are living in truth. The quiet conscience is an invention of the devil." - Albert Schweizer
My blog. http://theupanddownblog.blogspot.com
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15th February 2012, 01:31 PM #11Retro Phrenologist
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15th February 2012, 02:03 PM #12GOLD MEMBER
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It's easy to be sceptical about something we know that may provide an alternative fuel source in the future. In the meantime I think we should adopt the glass half full attitude.
I forgot about alternative biofuels such as ETOH from sugar etc. Mind you, that's a heck of a lot of sugar we're going to have to produce.-Scott
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15th February 2012, 04:05 PM #13SENIOR MEMBER
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Many a confident (but subsequently seen as dumb) prediction has been made about the future.
There will be false promises, wrong turns, dead ends and plenty of naysayers on the way but advances in technology and sheer necessity will eventually bring workable replacements for fossil fuels.
No doubt when the first smoky rattly motorised contraptions took to the roads there were many who were adamant that those expensive unreliable gadgets would never replace a good horse.
Not motor vehicles, I know, but not long ago a 10Mb Hard Drive cost $10,000 and was the size of a 4-drawer filing cabinet. Now we get thousands of times that capacity on something the size of a postage stamp and it costs spare change.
The first digital cameras I saw (not many years back) had, I think, a 1megapixel sensor and cost about $1500.
We could all think of dozens or hundreds of similar examples.Brian
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15th February 2012, 07:56 PM #14Retro Phrenologist
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Hydrogen is not and never will be a fuel source. It is more like a battery. You pump an enormous amount of energy into making it, compressing it and storing it. and then you can burn it to release some of the energy that you just pumped into it.
For now, I won't go into the problems of compressing it and storing it.
In a world that will be struggling to produce enough food to stop whole populations from starving, bio fuels will make life very difficult.____________________________________________________________
there are only 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand binary arithmetic and those that don't.
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15th February 2012, 08:34 PM #15
Nobody seems to have the answer to the problem. Bio fuel in probably unworkable due to the problems producing the raw material would cause. Pity its not possible to produce the raw materials we need in our deserts throughout the world. If only we could cultivate the deserts our troubles could be over.
Maybe someone will find a way to make fuel from sand.but I guess that would run out one day too.Reality is no background music.
Cheers John
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