Someday, Electric Cars Will Be Great
Right now, they are expensive, inconvenient, and not very good for the environment.
A Nissan Leaf in production
Photo by KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images
Photo by KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images
The idea of the electric car has long captured the imaginations of
innovators, including even Henry Ford and Thomas Edison more than a
century ago. Celebrities, pundits, and political leaders alike have cast
these vehicles as the apotheosis of an environmentally responsible
future. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has proclaimed that there will
be 1 million electric cars on the Autobahn by 2020. President Barack Obama has likewise promised 1 million electric cars in the United States, but five years sooner.
Someday, the electric car will, indeed, be a great product—just not
now. It costs too much; it is inconvenient; and its environmental
benefits are negligible (and, in some cases, nonexistent).
Many developed countries provide lavish subsidies for electric cars:
amounts up to $7,500 in the U.S., $8,500 in Canada, 9,000 euros in
Belgium, and 6,000 euros even in cash-strapped Spain. Denmark offers the
most lavish subsidy of all, exempting electric cars from the country’s
marginal 180 percent registration tax on all other vehicles. For the
world’s most popular electric car, the Nissan Leaf, this exemption is
worth 63,000 euros.
The numbers have forced Obama and Merkel to reconcile their
projections with reality. The US Department of Energy now expects only
about 250,000 electric cars by 2015, or 0.1 percnet of all cars on
America’s roads. Merkel recently admitted that Germany will not get
anywhere near 1 million electric cars by 2020.
No one should be surprised. According to an analysis
by the Congressional Budget Office, a typical electric car’s lifetime
cost is roughly $12,000 higher than a gasoline-powered car. Recent research
indicates that electric cars may reach break-even price with hybrids
only in 2026, and with conventional cars in 2032, after governments
spend hundreds of billions of dollars in subsidies.
Costs and subsidies aside, electric cars have so far proved to be incredibly inconvenient. A BBC reporter
drove the 484 miles from London to Edinburgh in an electric Mini and
had to stop eight times to recharge, often waiting six hours or more. In
total, he spent 80 hours waiting or driving, averaging just over six
miles an hour—an unenviable pace even before the advent of the steam
engine.
Electric cars also fail to live up to their environmental billing.
They are often sold as “zero emissions” vehicles, but that is true only
when they are moving.
For starters, the manufacturing process that produces electric
cars—especially their batteries—requires an enormous amount of energy,
most of it generated with fossil fuels. A life-cycle analysis shows that almost half of an electric car’s entire CO2 emissions result from its production, more than double the emissions resulting from the production of a gasoline-powered car.
Moreover, the electricity required to charge an electric car is
overwhelmingly produced with fossil fuels. Yes, it then emits about half
the CO2 of a conventional car for every mile driven (using European electricity). But, given its high CO2 emissions at the outset, it needs to be driven a lot to come out ahead.
Proponents proudly proclaim that if an electric car is driven about 180,000 miles, it will have emitted less than half the CO2
of a gasoline-powered car. But its battery will likely need to be
replaced long before it reaches this target, implying many more tons of
CO2 emissions.
In fact, such distances seem implausible, given electric cars’ poor
range: The Nissan Leaf, for example, can go only 73 miles on a charge.
That is why most people buy an electric car as their second car, for
short commutes. If the car is driven less than 32,000 miles on European
electricity, it will have emitted more CO2 overall than a conventional car.
Even if driven much farther, 93,000 nukes, an electric car’s CO2
emissions will be only 28 percent less than those of a gasoline-powered
car. During the car’s lifetime, this will prevent 11 tons of CO2 emissions, or about 44 euros of climate damage.
Given the size of the subsidies on offer, this is extremely poor
value. Denmark’s subsidies, for example, pay almost 6,000 euros to avoid
one ton of CO2 emissions. Purchasing a similar amount in the
European Emissions Trading System would cost about 5 euros. For the
same money, Denmark could have reduced CO2 emissions more than a thousand-fold.
Worse, electric cars bought in the European Union will actually increase global CO2
emissions. Because the EU has a fixed emission target for 2020, it will
offset emissions elsewhere (perhaps with more wind power), regardless
of the type of car purchased: 38.75 tons of CO2 from a gasoline car, and 16 tons from the electricity produced for an electric car. But, while EU emissions stay the same, most electric batteries come from Asia, so an extra 11.5 tons of emissions will not be offset.
The electric car’s environmental transgressions are even worse in
China, where most electricity is produced with coal. An electric car
powered with that electricity will emit 21 percent more CO2 than a gasoline-powered car. And, as a recent study
shows, because China’s coal-fired power plants are so dirty, electric
cars make the local air worse. In Shanghai, air pollution from an
additional million gasoline-powered cars would kill an estimated nine
people each year. But an additional million electric cars would kill 26
people annually, owing to the increase in coal pollution.
The electric-car mantra
diverts attention from what really matters: a cost-effective transition
from fossil fuels to cheaper green energy, which requires research and
innovation. Electric cars might be a great advance for that purpose in a
couple of decades. But lavish subsidies today simply enable an
expensive, inconvenient, and often environmentally deficient technology.
In recent time, you saw that peoples are mad behind electric car because the price of electric cars is less than regular cars. Electric cars is climate friendly as well and nowadays many companies produce some nice electric cars.
ReplyDeleteLone Mountain Truck Leasing