Slowpoke Slim
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2017
- Messages
- 3,615
- Location
- Bismarck, ND
- Tractor
- Husqvarna YTH24V48 riding mower, Branson 3725CH
The 'dirty-ness' of grid power is a function of the fuel source used by electrical generator(s) for your part of the world/country/state/county — it has nothing to do with the cleanliness of EVs, and it is misleading (or, at the very least, a mistake) to conflate the two.
If your part of the world is dominated by Jurassic-era generators, then sure, your grid electricity will be dirty, and everything that relies on that electricity will be dirty. EV technology in and of itself is 'clean' — certainly much cleaner than anything based on dinosaur juice — but whether or not grid electricity is clean, well, that's a different issue. Analogy: An engine can be designed to run clean. If you give it a good quality fuel, it does indeed run clean. If, however, you feed it poor quality fuel, then it runs dirty. The fault lies not with the engine, rather with the fuel. It is illogical to blame the engine when you should blame the fuel. Likewise it is illogical to blame EVs when you should be blaming grid electricity.
I live in a part of the world that hasn't seen a coal power station in years, and is in the process of phasing out gas. We generated over half of our electricity from solar and wind in 2019, and that fraction has increased every year. Another nearby state is almost totally hydro. In these states going electric is obviously and undeniably "cleaner" than sticking with dino juice. No-one could mount a remotely-serious argument otherwise.
But it wasn't always this way. Twenty years ago we had coal stations producing a fair fraction of base load. Now they are extinct. A nearby state is retiring all of their coal stations because coal simply can't compete on price in the national energy market — solar is so much cheaper. The same story is common everywhere I look. The grid itself has become greener, and is getting greener every single day. It is impossible for a coal power plant to even get planning permission any more, let alone financing. So if you buy an EV today, and charge it from the grid, every single day you own it the fuel will just get greener and greener.
It's not an "illusion". It's just math and market forces.
Please don't think that just because dinosaurs still roam the streets in your neck of the woods, that they do so everywhere else in the world.
It won't be that long before the only place you can find diesel will be in a museum.
PS: It took 13 years for New York City to transition from >95% horse-drawn buggies to >95% ICE cars. 13. Folks under about 70 years of age that assert "it won't happen in my lifetime" might want to re-calibrate their opinion based on the lessons of history.
Now you're just selectively picking out tiny sound bites out of what I said, just so you can pick an argument.
You came here to argue. I did not.
Reread ALL of what I said. Don't just pick out one selective phrase so you can build an argument against it.
Most of the US power grid is still run off of coal powered plants. Doesn't matter how you "feel" about that. It's a fact. Sure, you can hand select certain areas of the country that *may* not be. But I'm talking about the entire US grid as a whole. And just because you see a cool little boutique power plant in your area, doesn't mean that The Grid isn't pulling power from one or even several states away. As an example, Palo Verde nuclear power plant in AZ sends almost all of it's electrical capacity to California. The coal fired plants in MT and ND also ship their power several states away (and specifically MT sends power to CA, while ND is sending power to MN-Twin Cities) for use in "somebody elses" neighborhood. We actually had rolling blackouts here in ND when the Texas grid went into overload, because of all the power we suddenly had to start sending down to TX. That's how the National Grid works. My take is you generally have NO IDEA where that power is coming from when you hook your electric "whatever" up to an outlet at your house (if you're hooked to The Grid at all), or some off site charging station.
And strip mining the planet for these "rare earth metals" that you claim are common and easy to mine, is going to do a number on the planet you're trying to save. Because that's how they're mining for metals now adays. They strip mine for it because it's cheaper to do so. Ever been to a strip mine? I have, both in the US and in 3rd world countries. And 3rd world countries LOVE to strip mine, because it puts fast cash in their pockets NOW, vs whatever climate and habitat destruction they may have to answer for down the road later.
I am fully prepared to "agree to disagree" with you. You seem to not be able to do that. Fine. But I'm done with this childish "tit-for-tat" that you seem to have preset in your mind.