Deleted User 298457
Deleted User 298457
Careful....you'll mash your pensionBe interested to know your thoughts, they're cheap on the NHS lease scheme but only the 2WD version IIRC.
Careful....you'll mash your pensionBe interested to know your thoughts, they're cheap on the NHS lease scheme but only the 2WD version IIRC.
Yeah, orders in for an i4, so probably got the Audi for 6 mths or so ... likely slowest car i've had in 20 years. Doh!Be interested to know your thoughts, they're cheap on the NHS lease scheme but only the 2WD version IIRC.
It swings in roundabouts, all the cash saved is making decent money in stocks at the moment.Careful....you'll mash your pension
Counter to the 'EVs aren't great' Rowan Atkinson opinion
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Fact check: why Rowan Atkinson is wrong about electric vehicles
Last week we ran a piece by Rowan Atkinson casting doubt on the environmental benefits of electric vehicles. Here Simon Evans of Carbon Brief offers his responsewww.theguardian.com
Moreover, he suggests alternatives to EVs that are not yet widely available, would be less beneficial to the climate and are guaranteed to be more costly.
It’s clear that hydrogen and synthetic fuels will be more expensive, than just sending the power into a battery vehicle, because they use significantly more energy to get that fuel. In the case of hydrogen it’s between 5-7x more energy, then you have transport, storage and ‘people managed’ pump station costs.Quite a skill 'fact' checking with a crystal ball...
Edit - in fact half of the "facts" are projections and predictions. It's a valid counter argument but fact check is a misleading term by The Guardian imo.
You were doing so well until you got to this, and then you failed. For two reasons, firstly:That won't continue when EVs start hitting End of Life in six figure numbers every year. Therefore the value of the pack as is will drop, significantly, simply due to good old supply and demand.
This basically.It’s clear that hydrogen and synthetic fuels will be more expensive, than just sending the power into a battery vehicle, because they use significantly more energy to get that fuel. In the case of hydrogen it’s between 5-7x more energy, then you have transport, storage and ‘people managed’ pump station costs.
For sure, they will be another option, but more expensive and less environmentally friendly.
This basically.
I’m not clear what the tax situation is over there but the cost of hydrogen in Norway is double the cost of buying diesel.
The other elephant in the room is that an individual hydrogen pumps can’t actually service that many cars per hour because of all the de-liquidation processes which recharge the buffer tanks that need to happen in the background. The nozzles also freeze when used repeatedly, even in very warm climates.
The cheapest hydrogen currently comes from gas reformation which is very carbon intensive. Hydrogen from electrolysis is not going to be cheaper than putting the electricity in a battery.
This hasn't been proven to be the case at any meaningful scale yet so is very much a 'might' instead of a 'will'.Ev batteries will have 3 lifecycles, 1) EV, 2) some storage non-mobile, 3) harvest back the rare earths for ££££
This hasn't been proven to be the case at any meaningful scale yet so is very much a 'might' instead of a 'will'.
This hasn't been proven to be the case at any meaningful scale yet so is very much a 'might' instead of a 'will'.
Edit - as for home storage... There is such an obvious solution to this which is already in the pipeline. Vehicle to home and vehicle to grid. Why stick half a decade old Tesla to your wall when you can just send power to and from the car you drive every day? It'll almost definitely have way more capacity and has the added benefit of being replaced with the car.
The counter 'fact check' to Rowan's article said that EV batteries didn't contain rare earth materials so it seems that argument gets spun whichever way suits! As for the rest of the materials, yes they have value but what will the cost be to A) get them out and B) deal with the rest of the waste in an acceptable way? If A+B doesn't significantly undercut the value of those materials then it makes that business model a hard sell.
Honestly, if I had to put money on how I think this industry will pan out, it will be levied back on to the manufacturers to deal with the problem of EoL batteries and that any talk of them being a proverbial pot of gold that companies can't wait to snap up never coming to fruition.
Although even that prediction doesn't hold up when we accept the innevitable fact that we will only be able to buy something from Geely or direct from the Chinese state by the time scrap EVs become an issue![]()
it’s amazing - EV’s have been mainstream since ~2011 and there isn’t a market for recycling EV batteries.
Yet all the anti-EV crowd suggest EV batteries only last 3-5 years.
Where are they all going then ?!
Surely no one is dumping anEV battery with said ‘rare eath metals’ worth thousands into landfill /Shrug
Atkinson with a huge car collection slagging off evs on their environmental benefits. Oh the irony
V2G or V2H which works perfectly for the 30% or so who can guarantee they will be parking on their drive.
The other problem is that if I am out during the day then my car cannot take the benefit of my solar. I think V2H or V2G will have its place, but that will be alongside and not instead of home storage for most.
Atkinson was an EV early adopter though, his article comes after all that experience.Atkinson with a huge car collection slagging off evs on their environmental benefits. Oh the irony
Atkinson was an EV early adopter though, his article comes after all that experience.
but the point is you have a surplus of wind generated electricity amd you need to store it somehow - which is what shell are planning in the netherlands with biggest electrolysis implantation,Hydrogen from electrolysis is not going to be cheaper than putting the electricity in a battery.
thought they were being stoockpiled at the moment until recycling technology & financing has caught up.Where are they all going then ?!
Surely no one is dumping anEV battery with said ‘rare eath metals’ worth thousands into landfill /Shrug