Everyone knows we will have an unlimited supply of fossil fuels forever, I mean come on burn me up some dead dinosaurs.
Without a whole lot of nuclear power we will be hard pressed to get away from oil and gas. There are presently serious practical shortcomings with EVs, most notably range and recharge time. Now if one never travels far this is acceptable but many people do travel regularly or semi-regularly long distance, not to mention the shipping industry.
Ive been in conversations on other forums about this and a very common retort to this concern is the belief that there WILL be technological advances to solve this. Maybe, maybe not I believe but one thing for sure is that neither wind nor solar are panacea like many erroneously believe.
Check out this article:Yes, and let’s not forget the power distribution infrastructure, which does get overloaded and fail at times. Add to that load several cars per household, and you’d have a good old fashioned blackout. Can you imagine having nothing but electric cars after the power gets knocked out by a hurricane, or an ice/snow storm, or any other event that knocks out power lines.
Fuel was hard to come by after Ida, but not as scarce as power and air conditioning. Recovery from a hurricane would be impossible without fossil fuels engines, at least for us regular folks.
That's a pretty cool technology feature, bit pricey in a car at nearly $5K. Wonder why power companies don't have battery banks in high usage areas to store excess power created in off peak times to supplement those times when power is in high demand and rolling brownouts have to be used...............
one thing for sure is that neither wind nor solar are panacea like many erroneously believe.
Wonder why power companies don't have battery banks in high usage areas to store excess power created in off peak times to supplement those times when power is in high demand and rolling brownouts have to be used...............
Without a whole lot of nuclear power we will be hard pressed to get away from oil and gas. There are presently serious practical shortcomings with EVs, most notably range and recharge time. Now if one never travels far this is acceptable but many people do travel regularly or semi-regularly long distance, not to mention the shipping industry.
Ive been in conversations on other forums about this and a very common retort to this concern is the belief that there WILL be technological advances to solve this. Maybe, maybe not I believe but one thing for sure is that neither wind nor solar are panacea like many erroneously believe.
Very cool, I like that technology.While not without problems, such arrangements DO exist: Introducing Megapack: Utility-Scale Energy Storage
In cities and well populated suburban areas, this all makes plenty of sense during "normal" times. Owning an EV to commute to work daily, ridesharing services, etc. have a solid place in the future of our society. When "normalness" is interrupted, and people do crazy ****, nearly every system we have gets overwhelmed. I may one day have an EV, but I'll always also have a fossil fuel powered vehicle (or a diesel powered generator on a trailer to pull behind the EV...........).It's been too long since I read the article but it basically laid out the math on the problem you are pointing to. It was something crazy like at least double or triple the current electricity demand to fuel an EV to replace every single combustion motor in the US. Bottom line is we use a lot of gas which equals a lot of electricity which we currently can not produce or supply.
The other retort to this concern that I have seen is that people will no longer own cars and will use ride share apps and alternative means. In rural US I think this approach has about zero chance of getting off the ground. Its possible in cities but raises a whole host of other issue like what happens when a hurricane is rolling through? Is Uber or whomever sending their fleet into flood waters, risking damage to pull you out.
I don't present those points as an argument against being concerned about the environment but rather a practical problem that the EV enthusiasts often fail or refuse to acknowledge. I personally feel a lot of that comes from the big car companies making wild claims like only having EVs by XYZ date. Its currently trendy to say that and scores lots of points but none of them are offering ways to charge these things.
It's been too long since I read the article but it basically laid out the math on the problem you are pointing to. It was something crazy like at least double or triple the current electricity demand to fuel an EV to replace every single combustion motor in the US. Bottom line is we use a lot of gas which equals a lot of electricity which we currently can not produce or supply. [emphasis added]
saddly them spent fuel rods, no to mention fukashema is dumping better then 50,000 of erated water into the ocean daily,Without a whole lot of nuclear power we will be hard pressed to get away from oil and gas. There are presently serious practical shortcomings with EVs, most notably range and recharge time. Now if one never travels far this is acceptable but many people do travel regularly or semi-regularly long distance, not to mention the shipping industry.
Ive been in conversations on other forums about this and a very common retort to this concern is the belief that there WILL be technological advances to solve this. Maybe, maybe not I believe but one thing for sure is that neither wind nor solar are panacea like many erroneously believe.
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