1.8 Million Barrels of Oil a Day Avoided from Electric Vehicles::Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News! We love covering electric … [continued]

        • Zink@programming.dev
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          1 year ago

          I wonder if anybody is doing electric trains with onboard emergency diesel generators. They wouldn’t need to be able to move the train at full speed. They would just need to be able to get the train moving to the next station or whatever, in the event of a prolonged outage or damage to infrastructure.

      • Sorgan71@lemmy.world
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        thats not what I mean. Of course they would best but either option is better than EVs. Diesel trains are cheaper tho

    • geogle@lemmy.world
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      Not through cities. We need clean running options in densly populated areas

      • Sorgan71@lemmy.world
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        Thats not my point, my point is that dirty running trains are better than clean running cars.

    • MrMusAddict@lemmy.world
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      Actually, in 2022 there were 94m barrels produced globally per day. So this is 2%. Statistically, not insignificant. Hopefully it’ll continue to grow rapidly.

      • Pirky@lemmy.world
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        I would have to dig to find it, but I remember reading years ago in a Car and Driver article that EV’s powered by even the dirtiest coal power plants will still return around 30 MPGe, which is better than most vehicles on the road today.

        Granted that article was from before the Hummer EV, so I’m sure that number will have changed somewhat.

    • sugartits@lemmy.world
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      Electricity usually.

      In all seriousness, even if the electricity comes from burning fossil fuels, that’s still preferable to burning them locally via internal combustion in a car’s engine.

      The pollution is one place, so is easier to manage/capture and a power plant is much more efficient than your car can hope to be, actually reducing overall usage and pollution for the same energy output.

      • FontMasterFlex@lemmy.world
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        oh so pollution is ok as long as it’s not in your backyard and happening in a confined locale… got it.

        • sugartits@lemmy.world
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          No dumbass, that’s very clearly not what I said nor what I was implying, and you know that.

          If the pollution is being produced in one area then we can actually capture and reduce the overall level of pollution which is produced.

          However, if we continue to use ICE cars then pollution will be scattered all over the place and there will be more of it as cars are less efficient than power stations.

          And in the mean time, we can of course transition over to renewables. The EV will happily accept power from both.

          See how that works?

          Try thinking just a little bit before responding. Legit felt like I was talking to a petulant child just there

          • FontMasterFlex@lemmy.world
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            It’s VERY clearly exactly what you said and i quote… “The pollution is one place, so is easier to manage/capture”

            If it’s so easy to capture why care if we’re burning coal or natural gas? just capture it. just control it. it’s so easy right? how is the burning of fossil fuels even “captured” at a rate that is even viable?

            • sugartits@lemmy.world
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              But I didn’t say:

              pollution is ok as long as it’s not in your backyard and happening in a confined locale…

              Nor did I imply otherwise. Stop lying you colossal piece of shit.

              I am saying that there would be less pollution overall running EVs which are charged by fossil fueled power stations compared to running ICE cars for the reasons I have already clearly explained and I see other commentators have already attempted to explain to you.

              It is overall a better solution. If we magically waved a magic wand and swapped every ICE on the road with an EV it would be overall better for everyone, even if the power source was from burning stuff to make it

              And yes, having power stations, which are usually not in dense residential areas is better as less people are breathing in the smoke at high concentrations.

              And those are the facts. It’s really simple if you actually read all of what I fucking wrote. Idiot.

              It still wouldn’t be a proper long term solution. I’m not saying that.

              Do you understand now or are you going to keep ignoring the very simple point?

              It must be so nice living in your level of ignorance and willfully completely ignoring literally half of the points being presented to you.

              • FontMasterFlex@lemmy.world
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                Does it always work for you to just try and insult your way to making a point? You’ve lost all credibility if you can’t make a point without doing so. I’ve not once called you a name, insulted your intelligence in any way, yet you think this is a acceptable way to not only debate a topic, but win an argument. I pity not only you personally, but those around you that have to put up with this behavior on an every day basis. On to your points.

                If you were to snap your fingers and make all internal combustion engines into electric vehicles, it would overwhelmingly overload our current grid. To compensate, you’d need to build many more powerplants and burn much more fuels to not only take up the slack just for vehicles, but for everyday household use as well. This would pollute even more. By adding the numerous new power plants, you’d have those be closer to neighborhoods than they are now. It’s a simple numbers game. One thing arguments like yours never seem to take into account is cause and effect. You seem to be completely ok with more pollution and raping of our environment as long as it’s not right there staring you in the face. You’re seemingly ok with exploiting an entire continent’s worth of people just so you don’t see some gasses escape a vehicle in front of your quaint home.

                Really, I still don’t understand why you think I’m mischaracterizing what you’ve said because you’ve gone ahead and reiterated it here AGAIN. If it makes you so incredibly angry to read what you’ve written, perhaps you should take a look in the mirror and try thinking all the way through your ideal situations. I don’t know how else to put it. You’ve admitted TWICE in this reply that you’re ok with pollution as long as it’s not near your home. I’m not lying about anything here. I’m simply restating what you’re saying.

                • sugartits@lemmy.world
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                  Does it always work for you to just try and insult your way to making a point?

                  You started it. I just returned the favour and was more overt.

                  You’ve lost all credibility if you can’t make a point without doing so. I’ve not once called you a name, insulted your intelligence in any way,

                  More lies. You very clearly said that I said something I did not say or insinuate. This was a very clear and deliberate act.

                  yet you think this is a acceptable way to not only debate a topic, but win an argument.

                  Again, you started it.

                  I pity not only you personally, but those around you that have to put up with this behavior on an every day basis

                  Take a look in the mirror.

                  To compensate, you’d need to build many more powerplants and burn much more fuels to not only take up the slack just for vehicles, but for everyday household use as well. This would pollute even more.

                  No, it would be less pollution. As I’ve already explained. Power stations pollute less than ICE cars for the same energy output.

                  The fictional situation I described would be less pollution

                  Again: read what I said.

                  By adding the numerous new power plants, you’d have those be closer to neighborhoods than they are now.

                  No reason that has to be the case.

                  You seem to be completely ok with more pollution and raping of our environment as long as it’s not right there staring you in the face.

                  I did not say that.

                  I specifically said it would be less pollution. Which part of this are you not understanding?

                  The entire continent would be better off as there would be less pollution.

                  Which part of that is so difficult for your tiny mind to understand? How are you struggling to comprehend this very basic point?

                  Everyone else I have spoken to about this has understood it very easily. You are the only one whl struggles with it

                  You’re seemingly ok with exploiting an entire continent’s worth of people just so you don’t see some gasses escape a vehicle in front of your quaint home.

                  Another lie.

                  I’ve put my money where my mouth is. I have a fairly large solar installation. I’m getting a heat pump installed. My gas will be cut off soon and my car is an EV which is charged either by my solar panels or my grid connection which is 100% green (according to my supplier)

                  Twice in as many paragraphs you’ve just made up stuff about me as a thinly vieled insult. Something you claim is beneath and you “feel sorry” for me for doing.

                  You are massive hypocrite. The only difference is that I overtly called you a cunt.

                  Really, I still don’t understand why you think I’m mischaracterizing what you’ve said

                  Because you are. And the record clearly shows that. To which I’ve explained multiple times but funnily enough you never acknowledge what I actually said.

                  because you’ve gone ahead and reiterated it here AGAIN.

                  Because I’ve attempted no less than three times to explain it.

                  Sadly I cannot make you understand the very basic point.

                  That’s on you, not me.

                  One more time:

                  EVs being powered by fossil fulled power stations would be overall better for the environment compared to ICE cars and EVs not existing as there would be less pollution overall.

                  I am not saying this is the ideal situation. We should still transition to renewables

                  If it makes you so incredibly angry to read what you’ve written, perhaps you should take a look in the mirror and try thinking all the way through your ideal situations.

                  Hypocrisy is a strong point for yourself it seems. Shame logic isn’t.

                  You’ve admitted TWICE in this reply that you’re ok with pollution as long as it’s not near your home.

                  Nope. I specifically said the exact opposite. I shall once again state the the overall pollution would be lower!

                  Yet again you have lied about what I said and the point I was making.

                  I’m not lying about anything here.

                  The record here says otherwise.

                  And this is why I’m insulting you: because you deserve it. You lie again and again about my very clear intent. So I’m calling you a cunt. Because you deserve it.

                  I can see you did the exact same thing to another commenter in this thread.

                  You are the problem. Not us.

                  It must be wonderful to just ignore half of what is said to you and continue to live in your bubble of ignorance.

                  If you reply with another pack of lies, I shall simply block you. I have a feeling you won’t be able to help yourself as you’ll want the “last word” but I won’t waste any more time on you if you continue on this idiotic route. Moron.

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    Yeah… Really want to bring that down staggeringly?

    STOP DRIVNG A GODDAMN CAR FOR SUB 5 MILE TRIPS AND START USING BIKES, PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION FOR LONGER TRIPS, AND YOUR LEGS FOR, YOU KNOW, TEO BLOCKS.

    While at it, all the American continent should start redesigning their cities. Everything is designed for cars only, it’s all unsustainable.

    • Shadywack@lemmy.world
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      While at it, all the American continent should start redesigning their cities. Everything is designed for cars only, it’s all unsustainable.

      This, ban stroads, end climate change. Force companies to solve the housing issues and mandate de-gentrification. Bam, we all have a future, we can afford homes, WFH becomes truly optional and RTO policies don’t ruin livelihoods. It would be the next thing down from curing cancer, ending world hunger, and truly being the E in DEI for all.

    • dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      The downvotes are from the conservative astroturfers that have been busy making Lemmy into more of a shithole like Reddit.

      • paf0@lemmy.world
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        Also people who have places to go, things to carry or don’t live in places friendly to bikes. Maybe even people who think writing things in all caps is lazy. Not everything is caused by the conservative boogieman. Both nuance and effective communication are important.

        • dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          The commenter said for short haul distances. Going to the store around the corner? You don’t need to bring the pickup truck (statistically, in North America, that’s probably the vehicle you drive).

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            Right, I don’t need a pickup truck, but I do need a trunk to put my groceries in to feed my entire family. I also need to do it quickly. They said 5 miles, that’s a long way.

      • Sybil@lemmy.world
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        if there is no difference in the actual oil extraction and burning, then it does no good.

    • astropenguin5@lemmy.world
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      A little less yeah, considering that there has been an increase in renewables for grid power, also it’s much more efficient burn oil/natgas/etc. in a big powerplant than in an ICE car, so less is needed overall.

      So yes. It does help. But electric trains are still better lol And we need more renewable grid power

      • Sybil@lemmy.world
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        less is needed overall.

        So yes. It does help

        this is what i’m dubious about. just because less is burned in, say, passenger vehicles does not mean any less is produced or burned in some other industry. this article actually says that we made more oil this year than last.

        • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          But it does mean less was produced for and burned by the automotive industry

          All other things equal if those EVs were ICE then even more oil would have been used for what should be obvious reasons

          • Sybil@lemmy.world
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            then even more oil would have been used

            if the oil is in the ground, it can’t have been used.

            • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              Do you think we literally use oil as we dig it up with no buffer?

              Or that oil extraction amount isn’t being constantly adjusted based on demand by every entity in charge of it?

              Or that if more ICE vehicles were on the road more oil would be needed?

              These are all very basic concepts

              • Sybil@lemmy.world
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                i think there is no way to prove we would have dug up and burned any more oil than we did since we can’t prove a counterfactual. what we do know is, despite an increased use of electric vehicles, oil extraction increased.

          • Sybil@lemmy.world
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            unless it actually decreased GHG emissions, it did no good. it’s rearranging the deck chairs.

  • Wersab@lemmy.world
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    This is bullshit where is the proof also the electric batteries are mined by.kids in.the cpngo

    • sugartits@lemmy.world
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      I assume you’re talking about Colbalt mining? It was difficult to decipher your meaning.

      Zero colbalt in a modern LFP battery which some cars are now using. Other battery chemistries do still use it, such as the device you used to type out your comment.

      Colbalt is also used in the production of gasoline. And when it’s used, it’s used: more is required to refine more fuel. Whereas the colbalt in a battery remains useful again and again every time you recharge a battery.

      So if you want to be mad about it, remember to be mad at your own usage as well.

    • Metype @lemmy.world
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      I’ll take a bike over a car any day, but for people who were going to drive? An electric vehicle will save oil usage over an ICE one.

      • sorghum
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        My Bolt EUV uses automatic transmission fluid in the transfer case to reduce the RPMs of the motor to the wheels. Traditionally ATF is refined from crude, but you can use a synthetic replacement. As far as I know it doesn’t have any grease fittings either, so it’s all sealed in on bearings and the like. Don’t get me wrong though, it’s a massive reduction in petroleum usage though.

        • dgmib@lemmy.world
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          It’s helpful to remember too that the problem isn’t using petroleum, the problem is burning it.

          As long as it’s properly disposed of using petroleum based lubricant doesn’t cause climate change.

          • astropenguin5@lemmy.world
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            Exactly, and petroleum really is a wonder material, it has so many amazing uses besides burning it but instead we decide to do the absolute worst thing with almost all of it

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        31.5 gallons in a barrel so your math shows 15Mbbl saved

        Article says 1.8Mbbl

        I’m missing the discrepancy

          • astropenguin5@lemmy.world
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            While 55 gal drums are the standard physical barrel, barrels as used for oil are their own unit, and oil is rarely in actual physical barrels anymore anyways. It’s weird, but it’s how the oil industry measures it.

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          Me probably, I don’t usually have to fill up my 15-gallon tank more than once a month. I don’t have to drive a lot and my car gets 30mpg when I do.

        • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          I am about that. Only use my car for work and picking up kids from aftercare. I would cycle to work but there is a highway that breaks my route.

      • aeharding@lemmy.world
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        Oh this is so fucking typical. “EV” or electric vehicles never means e-bikes when it would benefit e-bikes (for example, EV subsidies = electric car subsidies) but when it conveniently makes electric cars look better, oh look an e-bike is an EV! 😒

        • HaoBianTai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Isn’t this article very clearly referring to Asian adoption of scooters, not a bunch of New Yorkers on e-bikes?

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              I mean, yes? You’re whining about US decision making around subsidies using a portion of the article discussing electric scooters in places like Taiwan. These are different continents and different vehicle types.

              A $500 subsidy on electric bicycles would not get Americans out of their cars and onto a bicycle, but it might make cyclists move to electric bikes, which wouldn’t be a behavioral change that would impact anything relevant to this study.

              I’m on your side, I wish my commute was only a couple miles. I’d ride a bicycle, and I’ve considered electric motorcycles. But you’re barking up the wrong tree, “price” is not what’s keeping Americans off of bicycles, electric or otherwise.

              • adrian783@lemmy.world
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                A $500 subsidy on electric bicycles would not get Americans out of their cars and onto a bicycle, but it might make cyclists move to electric bikes, which wouldn’t be a behavioral change that would impact anything relevant to this study.

                why would you think that? I think you’re wrong and price is a big factor. cyclists are unlikely to move to ebike because they can already make it work on a regular bike.

      • poopkins@lemmy.world
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        Strange that the parent comment is downvoted for highlighting the fact that electric bikes (and scooters & trikes) continue to make more of an impact.

        For me personally, since I got my electric bike 2 years ago, I use it at least 90% of the time to commute to work (unless the weather is too miserable).

          • poopkins@lemmy.world
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            Oh I’d have to check about the stats. I’m in Switzerland, where I use a Winora Tria 8 and usually carry along just above the electrical assistance (unless I go up a mountain), which caps out at 25 km/h.

    • jumpinjesus@lemmy.world
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      Yeah which is always weird. How many of those people weren’t just riding normal bikes before vs downsizing from a car. I’m on my 3rd EV and would love to bike if it were an option where I live, but if I went with a bike, I’d just be replacing another EV.

      • astropenguin5@lemmy.world
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        Assuming you could feasibly bike, it would probably still be environmentally better to use the bike, mostly because it is more energy efficient at moving a single human places because it doesn’t have to move a whole car frame, and in most places a fair amount of power is still from fossil fuels, so less would be needed. Also the other benefits of biking.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      I’d love one! By fuck me, I clicked a Lemmy link earlier and it was $7,000 USD. Did you want gears with that? Another $1,300.

      All for a bike that won’t hit 40mph, which is hella dangerous on the open road. Couldn’t move out of danger fast enough. Had a 150cc scooter, never again, 250cc or bust.

      But still, a gas scooter burns so little gas, I’d forget to look at the tank, had no idea what gas cost at the time.

        • fruitycoder
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          Chicken and egg problem for sure. I’ve been trying to convince my community/towns to try to build dedicated safe bike infrastructure for neighborhoods to schools at least. With the hope this can expand from there (plus more people just used to riding bikes!).

        • shalafi@lemmy.world
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          That would be great! But I doubt anyone wants to put the $$$ into building a 30-mile bike lane on a rural highway out to my camp in the swamp. And that’s about the only place I go that really uses gasoline.

          We don’t all live in cities, and some like me, find the idea appalling. (Been there, done that my whole life.) I’m quite happy on the very edge of town, where’s there are plenty of rivers, woods, creeks, trails and swamps to explore. But I just can’t safely bike to those places.

          • frezik@midwest.social
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            There’s a lot of FuckCars people who ask for too much. We don’t need to go completely car-less, and that’s an unattainable goal for a lot of reasons.

            Most US cities have <5% of people using bikes as their main commute method, and around 20-30% doing work from home. What can we do to get to 20% of commuters on a bike while maintaining WFH numbers? That alone would be transformative. Tons of cars off the road, and enough bike usage to demand city councils dedicate more to bike infrastructure.

          • cooopsspace@infosec.pub
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            Obligatory “your 1% edge case doesn’t invalidate the point” comment.

            Many many many many people could bike if there was infrastructure.

            Again - it’s not a once size fits all solution. But you should still advocate for better bike infrastructure where applicable.

      • bassomitron@lemmy.world
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        $7k for an ebike? There are tons of good options for <$2000. Hell, you can get budget models on Amazon for around $300.

        And most cities have bike lanes on city streets for a reason. However, if you need to commute to work that requires you traversing a highway, then yeah, ebikes are definitely not the solution for you.

        • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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          When I lived in Eastern Europe, I bought a foldable E-bike for the equivalent of 500 USD from Decathlon.

          My commute was 10km one-way. It was better than the bus. The thing still runs after 2 years of intense use and 2 years of complete neglect.

      • arthurpizza@lemmy.world
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        That’s like claiming cars are too expensive because you can’t afford a Tesla.

        I bought a wonderful ebike from REI for $1,300. You don’t need to buy the fancy luxury models.

      • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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        I just bought an E-bike with 40+ mile range for $275. 750W motor and 15Ah 48v battery bike with 7 gears, lights, an LCD, a cargo rack, and fat tires.

        It was a good sale

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        1 year ago

        That’s nuts, I thought 2k for USA made ebikes was crazy.

        • shalafi@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Know where I can best shop? I just want a low-end unit for cruising around my camp, running up to the store from there or my house, super simple stuff.

      • frezik@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        I converted a bike I bought off Craigslist for $200 plus an $850 Bafang kit off AliExpress. Didn’t have any experience with bike maintenance beforehand, but did have access to a makerspace with a full bike bench (there’s some specialized tools for pulling things out). Didn’t have it completely working before winter hit–works as a bike, but the motor assist isn’t kicking in for some reason–but I still think it’s an option most people could pull off.

  • jenny_ball@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    but also factor in what it takes to charge those batteries because that is fossil fuel somewhere down the line.

    • ExLisper@linux.community
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      1 year ago

      You’re soooo behind the schedule. That was the anti-EV talking point 5 years ago. You were supposed to move to ‘but did they factor in the battery production??’ (which they do) and now use one of ‘but is the grid ready for so many EV?’ or ‘there are no EVs below $30.000’!!. You’re welcome.

      • mriguy@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        No, even those are the old talking points! Now it’s “EVs have batteries that are very heavy, so they generate lots of tire particulates, which is way worse than the tailpipe emissions of ICE cars, which somehow magically don’t also have tires or something, and aren’t also getting heavier every year.”

        • ExLisper@linux.community
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          1 year ago

          Why wasn’t I told about the new talking points? I though we agreed all new talking points will be shared during Monday meetings. I will have a word with Kevin about this.

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          You skipped brakes. For a short time generating brake pad particulates was the talking point, until they discovered what “regen” meant

    • I_Fart_Glitter@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      They did.

      Naturally, less oil being burnt means less CO2 emissions. BNEF estimates that electric vehicles currently prevent 112 million metric tons of CO2 emissions per year. And this is net emissions reductions, also taking into account the emissions from extra electricity generation.

    • Snowstorm@lemmings.world
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      1 year ago

      edit: so the article claimed to have factored electricty generation. Cant believe you are the one being downvoted this hard. As someone who worked in the renewable energy research institute, each time people equal ev to ‘clean’ automatically I get crazy. The article especially mentioned china, who has a significant portion of electricty generated by coal. Even its by oil, it would produce more co2 for energy loss in conversion. The article has no merit with such flawed comparison

      • seang96@spgrn.com
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        1 year ago

        The article literally states they factored in charging the battery, which is the main reason they are being down voted. Read the dang article if you are going to criticize it.

        • Snowstorm@lemmings.world
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          1 year ago

          I did not catch the single sentence buried there while being distracted by the old/new ev critism talk. Thanks for pointing out. This is interesting now if true. I’m reading the pdf later

          • seang96@spgrn.com
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            1 year ago

            Yeah I am assuming it is true based off other reasings. Didn’t really read the data behind this article though. From past references larger battery EVs take about 16 months of break-in before it’s carbon neutral for manufacturing / emissions costs from an ICE vehicle. At that point even the heavy fossil fuel reliant electrical grids for charging is more energy / carbon neutral than the cost to refine / deliver / use gasoline for ice vehicles.