Gasoline vs Electric Vehicle Future Fuel Costs
This was originally a comment on David Middleton’s post, https://wattsupwiththat.com/2019/10/31/the-oil-age-is-doing-just-fine-bloomberg-new-energy-finance-notwithstanding/
The original comment was from Detengineer, in reply to another comment from Mark, so the 2nd paragraph is directed at Mark, not David.
Detegineer goes into very good detailed calculations, on replacing ICE with EVs. Mod.
I think David is on solid ground regarding the future of the oil industry.
I read through your links and noted there were a lot of assertions, but very little in the way of data or logic to support the assertions. I agree with you that autonomous vehicles and transportation as a service (TAAS) will come to dominate the vehicle market. However, an autonomous vehicle can be powered by anything; batteries, an internal combustion engine, fuel cell, or even compressed air. Whether electric or internal combustion vehicles dominate the future market comes down to economics and project execution capabilities, and I believe we can make a fair estimate of this.
Assumptions:
1. There will be no Idiot Swan events. There will be no outright bans on drilling or frac’ing. Tax policy will not provide heavy subsidies for renewable power or batteries, nor will tax policy unduly burden oil and gas production.
2. The difference in purchase price for an EV and ICE vehicle will be almost immaterial to the economics of vehicle choice. This is based on the assumption that TAAS will push vehicle lifetime mileage closer to 1,000,000 miles, at which point the dominant economic driver will be fuel cost.
Vehicle Fuel Cost:
Based on today’s cost of gasoline and electricity (my latest bill) the cost of each at the wheel is:
• Gasoline: $0.3415/kWh ($2.50/gallon, 20% efficiency)
• Electricity: $0.2667/kWh ($0.16/kWh, 60% efficiency)
(efficiencies from your link https://www.forbes.com/sites/energyinnovation/2017/09/14/the-future-of-electric-vehicles-in-the-u-s-part-1-65-75-new-light-duty-vehicle-sales-by-2050/#76551c18e289)
This places gasoline at a 30% price disadvantage relative to electricity (not the more than 2:1 price disadvantage in your link https://www.globalxetfs.com/future-of-transportation-is-autonomous-electric)
So if fuel cost for an electric vehicle is lower and the initial purchase price differential is assumed to not be a factor and TAAS effectively eliminates the charging management and range issues that affect EV acceptance, then why do I believe the EV’s will not take over the world anytime soon?
Simple. I have reason to believe that the cost of electricity will rise both because of rising demand and the move to renewable power generation. I also have reason to believe that the availability of electricity will be a constraining factor; we just can’t build it fast enough.
The Future Cost of Electricity:
Moving to 100% renewable electricity power generation will considerably increase the cost of electricity.
The installed cost of solar PV, wind, and for comparison combined cycle natural gas turbines (CCGT) are:
• Solar: $3,000/kW (multiple sources)
• Wind: $1,400/kW (https://www.conserve-energy-future.com/windenergycost.php and
https://www.wind-energy-the-facts.org/index-43.html )
• CCGT: $965/kW (EIA)
Of course to get the costs on a consistent basis we should include the cost of fuel for the expected life of the shortest lived capital investment, estimated at 20 years.
• Natural Gas NPV: $3,108/kW ($4.00/MSCF 2019 pricing from EIA, 2.5% interest rate)
This yields an equivalent installed cost for a combined cycle natural gas turbine of $4,073/kW.
So it appears that renewables really are cheaper, quite a bit cheaper, than all the other power sources. Could the proponents of renewable power be right?
No. We all know that we have to look at what it costs to provide reliable 24/7/365 power, which is a vastly different proposition than installing ‘nameplate’ power. To supply reliable power requires the installation of additional solar PV or wind turbines to produce enough power above immediate consumption to meet 24/7 power demand and batteries and inverters to store the power until needed. So we need installed cost for inverters and batteries:
• Inverters: $392/kW (National Renewable Energy Laboratory: “2018 U.S. Utility-Scale
Photovoltaics-Plus-Energy Storage System Costs Benchmark”)
• Batteries: $73/kWh (Also from “The Future of Electric Vehicles”, 2030 estimated
cost)
Based on this the estimated installed cost to deliver 1 kW of power continuously is:
• Solar: $17,792/kW
• Wind: $11,246/kW
• CCGT: $ 4,244/kW
Assumptions:
• Solar: 8 hours minimum daylight in winter, no more than 1 day without sunlight, and 2 days to recharge after discharge.
• Wind: Average generation at 30% of nameplate, no more than 1 day without wind, and 2 days to recharge after discharge.
• CCGT: 85% mechanical availability.
Obviously how you play with the assumptions has a huge impact on cost. For solar I assumed a southwest desert climate with relatively long winter days and short periods without sunlight. Similarly for wind I assumed nearly continuous wind as one would expect in the mountain west.
What’s driving the cost is the need to install 5+ kW of nameplate capacity plus 40+ hours of batteries to support 1 kW of reliable 24/7/365 power. Costs escalate precipitously for conditions in the northeast (less sunlight, less wind). This is just a hugely inefficient use of capital (but an interesting spreadsheet exercise.)
Based on the installed cost we can estimate consumer power cost:
• Solar: $0.4059/kWh
• Wind: $0.2566/kWh
• CCGT: $0.0486/kWh
I’ve assumed a 5 year simple payout on capital invested. The fuel component of the power cost for the CCGT is the price of natural gas prorated for turbine efficiency of 60%.
When we including delivery charges we get a total cost of:
• Solar: $0.4959/kWh
• Wind: $0.3466/kWh
• CCGT: $0.1386/kWh
I chose a flat $0.09/kWh based on my power bill. This is likely underestimated in all cases as I would expect solar and wind to have higher delivery costs due to the geographically diffuse nature of the systems and the CCGT cost excludes natural gas delivery to the plant.
Vehicle Fuel Cost in a Renewable World:
The cost of power at the wheel again assuming 60% conversion efficiency in an EV.
• Solar: $0.8265/kWh
• Wind: $0.5777/kWh
• CCGT: $0.2310/kWh
• Gasoline: $0.3415/kWh
As we can see solar and wind are not at all competitive with gasoline, running respectively 242% and 169% relative to the price of gasoline. This is not going to incentivize anyone to buy electric cars; certainly not fleet owners. However we can see that natural gas retains a strong economic advantage over gasoline and assuming suitable supplies could support the conversion to electric cars.
The Future Cost of Gasoline:
Should electric vehicles start to reduce the demand for oil I would expect to see the price of gasoline drop, potentially quite a lot. On the low side the price of oil is limited by the cash flow requirements to keep production going. In refining margins would drop through cost cutting and the closure of high cost/bbl refineries and is limited by cash flow requirements. Speculating here but in dire circumstances gasoline prices could drop to between $1.00 and $1.50/gallon.
The one thing we can say with reasonable certainty is that the supply of oil will be adequate for the next several decades. Therefore the cost of gasoline is not likely to rise precipitously and drive the economics toward electric vehicles.
Converting Transportation to Electricity:
Thinking about it, in 2016 fossil fuels used for transportation represented 26.44 quads of energy (EIA). To put this in perspective fossil fuels represented 23.54 quads to electricity generation; transportation and electricity generation consume about the same amount of fossil fuels. The total fossil fuel contribution to electricity generation and transportation comes in at 49.98 quads. The cost to convert this infrastructure to renewables is below (in $Trillions):
What I never see mentioned is what it will cost to convert all the fossil fuels used in transportation to renewable electricity. Does nobody think about these things?
Transportation Electricity Total
• Solar $15.73 $14.00 $29.73
• Wind $9.94 $8.85 $18.79
These numbers exclude distribution costs and EV support infrastructure costs. If we call this an additional 25% to 50% above solar or wind installation costs then we are talking in round numbers $24 to $44 trillion. To put this in perspective the GDP of the US in 2018 was $20.5 trillion. To eliminate fossil fuels in transportation and electrical power generation by 2050 we need to invest $1 – 1.5 trillion every year, or 5-7.5% of the US’s GDP. (Note that this excludes nuclear and fossil fuels used by industry.)
Another way to look at this is we need to execute 1,000 – 1,500 separate billion dollar projects every year. My personal experience with multi-billion dollar projects is they take 8-10 years to execute and finding qualified people is like finding hen’s teeth. The management, engineering, and skilled trade resources are just not out there to execute in effect 10,000 separate billion dollar projects in parallel for 30 years. (Finding qualified people for a multi-billion project during the financial downturn in 2008-2010 was just about impossible.) Finally, if we were to try, the competition for resources would drive engineering and construction costs up tremendously.
Wrapping Up:
Oil will remain the primary transportation fuel for the next several decades. While a superficial look at today’s prices for electricity and gasoline seem to indicate a strong economic driver for converting automobiles from internal combustion to electric a deeper look at the probable future cost of electricity versus gasoline shows a strong economic advantage for gasoline over electricity derived from renewable sources. Electricity sourced from natural gas (combined cycle gas turbines) retains an economic advantage over gasoline and assuming suitable supplies exist could support the conversion to electric cars.
Regardless of economics, the large cost and skilled labor demands of converting the economy to renewables makes it highly unlikely that a significant portion of the fossil fuel supplied portion of the transportation market can be converted to renewables by 2050. Even if we limit the project scope to using natural gas derived electricity to support the conversion to battery powered cars limited management and technical resources will likely constrain the pace of the conversion.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
This very interesting analysis seems to ignore an obvious additional option – using ICE cars with engines (slightly) modified to use compressed or liquefied natural gas as fuel.
That may be optimal in terms of both end-user costs and capital requirements.
The report mentions moving to 100% renewables. This is not going to happen, it just won’t work. (Except for the rare case where hydro is a significant and feasible source of electricity).
Adding grid load by transitioning from liquid to electric vehicles then means an increase in fossil fuel generation. The whole idea of electric vehicles is based on a false premise that renewables will power them.
The simple reason is that renewables and nuclear cannot give any more power than they generate as they run at full available output, this
leaves the dispatchable fossil fuel plants to increase output to match the extra load.
One notable featore of electric vehicles is that yhey hav ‘batteries’ of chemical energy storage cells, so they can charge at off peak times when there is a surplus of electricity.
Igor, my first thought was also on direct use for NG- it also is already distributed and available everywhere. Les Johnson did do an excellent job taking the handwaving out of the usual “comparisons” but few consider the enormous mining, processing, shipping, manufacturing, delivery costs and the huge demand for tech and skilled trades demand for this sector, already flagged by LJ for the contruction sector. And this front end part will require enormous amounts of … fossil fuels!! Thinking big with tiny brains (the wand waving GND set).
Don’t need NG for vehicles. Best option is CTLs / GTLs (synthetic diesel or gasoline) via Fischer – Tropsch. Clean. Stable. Runs in current engines. Minimizes emissions. Cheers –
Who is going to invest 100s of billions US$ into building enough processing plants for Fischer- Tropsch to make any difference (that’s assuming one can find enough places where those could be built and qualified people to build those) when oil prices are highly unpredictable?
My opinion is we are at or near peak EV. Less more subsidy or government prohibitions I believe most everyone that can afford the EV has one. What I never hear discussions of; (except Eric Peters). EVs will not be useful much above the vitamin d latitude (about 37 degrees) in the winter. Near freezing you’ll end up at half the already limited vehicle range, god help you if you want to run the heater and the added benefit of waiting 40 minutes in the snow for a quick recharge. Cold enough, you have to warm the battery to be able to charge it. I love the image of a Tesla recharge station run by a diesel generator. My gas station has 24 pumps by maybe 10 minutes refueling. Similar capacity for EV would be near 100 charging stations. I’m pretty sure people don’t want to wait 40 minutes in line before 40 minutes of charging. No one can bring you a gallon of charge if you run out. As Mr. Peters points out, you get into an EV trying to calculate range based on the conditions.
Plugin hybrids check most of the boxes. Enough EV range for commuting plus engine for winter heat and long range when necessary.
Whether ‘pure’ EVs make sense above 37 degrees latitude is a good question. Great in summer, can get a full charge fron 10 kw solar panels most days. But at about 51 degrees north here the morning temp was minus 19 c, it took 2.5 hours to charge and warm before leaving at 10 kw, after 118 km we topped it up at 75 kw for 15 minutes and it cost $6 Canadian. We also plugged into a 6 kw charger free charger for a couple hours while shopping. Heat was on, range was down to 57% of rated.
But we saw gasoline from $1.10 to as low as $0.86 a litre so driving on that is also cheap right now.
Agree with the hybrid solution. At least you have a backup to get you to the charging station.
“…use compressed or liquefied natural gas as fuel.”
Propane (or “LPG”, which is 60% min propane, rest is butane) is a considerably better fuel than NG, simply because:
1) higher energy denisty (same volume of fuel takes you further)
2) easily liquified at sensible temperatures and pressures (tanks are lighter and do not require insulation or refrigeration)
3) infrastructure is largely already in place (to service BBQ and other cooking/heating/lighting needs)
4) only minimal engine changes needed (just fuel delivery at a minimum, compression and ignition modifications can be done if greater efficiency is desirable) – “dual fuel” is simple with lpg, even on a carby engine
5) liquid injected lpg gives no loss of performance and in some cases an increase in performance (as the fuel evaporates, it cools the intake charge, allowing for more air/fuel)
6) it is mostly an otherwise waste product – propane, and even more so butane, are flared off in large volumes due to lack of available storage.
Here in Aus, LPG is approx. half the price of gasoline – my 300 HP 5.7 V8 costs less to run on LPG than the 200HP 3.5 V6 on gasoline it replaced. Since I do a minimum of 1,000 miles a week, it’s worth it to me to get the V8, which is considerably better in longevity terms (not to mention driving pleasure).
YMMV (sorry, couldn’t resist 😉 )
Also, propane can be manufactured by polymerising NG – easy enough to do if required, so little risk of it being unavailable.
LPG vehicles can be unreliable in cold weather, and fire code prevents them out of heated underground parking. I used to commonly see the big tanks in light and medium trucks but hardly ever now.
By ‘cold’ I don’t mean anything you would see in Australia, not sure why LPG isn’t more popular there and in other livable climates.
Electric cars are shorter range but don’t suddenly stop because a valve froze up in killing cold weather.
Using a 2 1/2 % discount rate for “invested/borrowed” money to fund all this is dishonest. The analysis would carry more weight for me if a realistic number – say 5 to 8 % – were used. Previous articles here at WUWT have dealt with this issue and have shown that wind and solar do much worse than even this analysis if the discount rate were truer to the real world.
I wonder what the uncaptured costs of decommissioning and maintaining solar and wind are? My guess is that the output of installed solar and wind drops over time as well. You have lots of little things scattered all over. It’s the blockbuster problem in the energy generation industry.
I guess we are about to find out , a good chunk of the early fleet is reaching its use by date.
Setting aside the usefulness of the output, I dont see why a properly maintained wind turbines output would drop over time.
“Setting aside the usefulness of the output, I dont see why a properly maintained wind turbines output would drop over time.”
46 Reasons why wind power can not replace fossil fuels
http://energyskeptic.com/2019/wind/
…Dead bugs and salt reduce wind power generation by 20 to 30%
German study, wind farms in Germany alone kill 1500 tons yearly, of insects, disrupting food chain,
https://docs.wind-watch.org/Interference-of-
(Those dead insects create a lot of drag on windmills.)
You Can’t Have Offshore Wind Power Without Oil
http://bit.ly/2m0vV8a
The Clean Power Plan Will Collide With The Incredibly Weird Physics Of The Electric Grid
http://bit.ly/2v5FJip
Grid Reliability: DOE Throws Down Red Flags On Unreliable Wind And Solar
http://bit.ly/2Z9HdG6
The “New Energy Economy”: An Exercise in Magical Thinking
March 26, 2019
https://www.manhattan-institute.org/green-energy-revolution-near-impossible
…About 60 pounds of batteries are needed to store the energy equivalent to that in one pound of hydrocarbons. Meanwhile, 50–100 pounds of various materials are mined, moved, and processed for one pound of battery produced.[54] Such underlying realities translate into enormous quantities of minerals—such as lithium, copper, nickel, graphite, rare earths, and cobalt—that would need to be extracted from the earth to fabricate batteries for grids and cars.[55] A battery-centric future means a world mining gigatons more materials.[56] And this says nothing about the gigatons of materials needed to fabricate wind turbines and solar arrays, too…
Study: Wind Power Increases Dependence on Fossil Fuels in EU; Germany Must Soon Begin to Scrap Its Wind Units—A New, Costly Environmental Issue
By IER
http://bit.ly/2B7hweU
On top of Winds unreliabilty and dependence of fossil fuels, it is neither Green nor Clean.
Big Wind’s Dirty Little Secret: Toxic Lakes and Radioactive Waste
http://bit.ly/35yNHlf
…In 2012, the U.S. added a record 13,131 MW of wind generating capacity. That means that between 4.9 million pounds (using MIT’s estimate) and 6.1 million pounds (using the Bulletin of Atomic Science’s estimate) of rare earths were used in wind turbines installed in 2012. It also means that between 4.9 million and 6.1 million pounds of radioactive waste were created to make these wind turbines.
For perspective, America’s nuclear industry produces between 4.4 million and 5 million pounds of spent nuclear fuel each year. That means the U.S. wind industry may well have created more radioactive waste last year than our entire nuclear industry produced in spent fuel. In this sense, the nuclear industry seems to be doing more with less: nuclear energy comprised about one-fifth of America’s electrical generation in 2012, while wind accounted for just 3.5 percent of all electricity generated in the United States…
What do you mean by properly maintained, and at what expense?
You see this with classic cars, they can, with proper maintenance, be kept in show room condition, but of course, you are talking about incurring costs, exceeding the costs that were involved in the original manufacture of the vehicle. You see the same with race cars, that used to be rebuilt after every single race.
Do you envisage replacing the wind turbine blades, and if so how often? These deteriorate with time, particularly in off-shore wind applications, where the blades are constantly, 24/7, being shot blasted with fine particle abrassives (ie., salt and in some locations possibly sand) which adversely impacts upon aerodynamics and drag.
Are you going to keep bearing tolerances as per factory specification? How often are bearings going to be replaced, shafts reground and rebalanced, and at what expense?
It is inevitable that there will be significant loss of efficiency as mechanical components wear, and which wear is uneconomic to address.
richard verney, you bring up a point. As a mech engineer, I balanced rotating equipment all the time. How in the heck do you balance one of these gargantuan pinwheels other than getting out on a blade and attaching a weight? And hoping you get it right the first time….
Wear and tear on the blades reducing their aerodynamic efficiency.
Worn gears in the gearbox reducing it’s efficiency.
Electronics degrade over time.
So the bottom line indicates that nothing much is likely to change for decades and probably not even then. Gasoline and diesel are the principal transportation fuels because they are the most practical and will remain so. Electric vehicles also rely on continuing low costs of copper.
… and lithium and cobalt. Hmm.
There is a probably a valid niche market for EV for city centre use and commuting, where shipping the pollution elsewhere makes sense. Beyond that it does not make sense.
Whether sense matters depends how much we let the zealots control our future.
Then again, predictions of the past are dead on! Who would of thunk it!?
Excerpt from the conclusions of this paper:
“Regardless of economics, the large cost and skilled labor demands of converting the economy to renewables makes it highly unlikely that a significant portion of the fossil fuel supplied portion of the transportation market can be converted to renewables by 2050.”
I agree with the above conclusion. Since 2002, I have published the following similar statements:
“The ultimate agenda of pro-Kyoto advocates is to eliminate fossil fuels, but this would result in a catastrophic shortfall in global energy supply – the wasteful, inefficient energy solutions proposed by Kyoto advocates simply cannot replace fossil fuels.”
“Fossil fuels comprise fully 85% of global primary energy, unchanged in decades, and unlikely to change in future decades.”
Yogi Berra correctly stated:
“It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
The esteemed Dr. Berra was correct. The IPCC and acolytes should take note, since every one of their very-scary predictions has failed to materialize – nobody should believe them.
Copper costs are only kept low through replacement use of plastics and aluminum in plumbing, etc..Plastics are made with fossil fuels and aluminum requires huge amounts of electricity in manufacture.
My friends in northern California recently discovered how useless their electric cars were when the power was out and fires raging nearby. And PG&E says 10 more years of the same, at least.
Your gasoline price includes state and federal tax for roads. If we convert all vehicles to EVs, the loss of revenue from gasoline taxes will have to be added to either the electricity price or charged by the mile. This will significantly increase the excess cost for wind and solar over gasoline.
The straightforward way to offset the lost gas tax revenue is up-front tax on electric vehicles. Drop the tax credit for purcase and add $3,500 to the purchase price to supplement road-taxes and the electric car market is fundamentally trashed
mark – clearly that won’t happen then. If replacing gas taxes with EV taxes becomes necessary, politicians will have to find a way of making it palatable to both manufacturers and consumers. But personally I cannot think of a way to do it right now.
You don’t have to think about it, someone in Govn’t will be doing that for you and it will just happen (Like the temporary MediCare levy hike by Gillard to help Brisbane flood victims).
Replacement tax is already in the works, this started years ago due to more efficient cars causing a drop in fuel tax but their fix still applies to EV’s. Simply put a GPS tracking based tax. This has the added bonus of allowing governments to practice congestion based taxing. At least here in Oregon us citizens don’t need to worry about our every move getting tracked, they pinky swore that our GPS data would be deleted right away so there would be no issue with using it to track our every move. Doesn’t matter, they are democrats and breaking government record retention laws (FOIA) is no problem so we can trust them to delete our data.
FYI, they’ve actually tested the system using volunteers who gave it glowing endorsements. No big surprise there, the only people who volunteered thought it was a good idea to start with. There’s been no mention of the system recently but I’m sure it will rise again like a zombie but instead of mumbling “brains” they’ll be shouting “what’s in your wallet?”
A per mile charge would work. The mileage could be checked every year and the charge calculated based on miles driven.
There would be a problem with apportioning the state portion of the tax if one lives in an area that is near one or more state border.
It’s more likely that future EV’s will wirelessly transmit the mileage of your vehicle to your electric company once a month and the required tax, based upon the miles driven during the month, will be added to your electric bill, collected by your electric company, and forwarded by them to each of several government units, local, state, and federal.
Incidentally, if you drive too far over the speed limit your EV (and your ICE vehicles as well) will spit out a traffic ticket while simultaneously deducting the fine from your linked bank account and forwarding it to the local traffic authority.
Welcome to 1984. The above are among the reasonable things that will happen. China is in the process of showing us the unreasonable.
P.S. Would someone tell me if all comments now go through moderation before appearing? Mine used to appear right away, but no longer do and I have no idea what I said or am doing that would result in my comments being singled out, assuming they are of course.
I doubt they would restrict themselves to fining the driver of a EV, with a half dozen cameras pointing out and just one pointing in.
A very large part of the price of gasoline is taxes. As the proportion of EV goes up, either that gas tax will go up hugely or they will find other ways of collecting that money. If every car has 5G in the promised glorious future, expect every road to be a toll road.
I must say I resent the BC greenies who drive EVs. They are so so smug about using untaxed domestic electricity to charge, when I pay fuel taxes to support the roads they drive upon. On top of that, they seem to need an ICE as a second vehicle for longer trips!
The few EV drivers that I have talked to declared to me that since their vehicles are saving the environment, they deserve all the subsidies they get.
They are so so smug about using untaxed domestic electricity to charge
there’s absolutely no taxes on your domestic electricity? at all? really? you luck duck.
Alberta’s average electricity price / solar feed in tariff over the summer was $0.068 / kwh. Gasoline $1.10 with $.25 taxes per litre equates to $0.85/ litre before tax at the pump before tax.
Since $0.85 buys 12.5 kw, at 180 watts / km the 6.8 cent electricity base price equates to gasoline at 197 miles per imperial gallon.
Gasoline doesn’t vary much in price, but with an electric vehicle we have to get used to the cost of charging varying by an order of magnitude depending on time and place.
It only makes sense for EV drivers to pay for road use, perhaps based on vehicle weight x distance travelled. Roads could be different prices based on their quality or speed limit, and the road’s owners could even be automatically and immediately notified of, and liable for, car destroying potholes and other defects.
Electricity at 7c per kWh, gasoline at $1.10
sounds like the 1970s from here in Oz
in my State x 4 for electricity , x 1.5 for gasoline (if you take the Loonie as being close enough to equal the Pacific Peso A$)
We are told renewables are putting “dowmward pressure” on electricity costs though, so I guess I can rest easy.
6.8 cents is what the utility pays for solar. If you want to use more than the panels put out it’s 24 cents / kwh at our house.
B.C. price with taxes was $1.70 last summer, we saw 86 cents a litre today in Calgary. But we didn’t put any in the Tesla.
The temperature outside right now is minus 21c, which really slows down mosquitos but kills a lot of seniors.
Didnt Illinois just introduce an annual registration loading on EVs to extract some road tax?
Trying,
Over here in Queen Elisabeth s never never land, there was an article some weeks ago whereby some government minister was bewailing the loss of tax “when Britain will have outlawed all internal combustion vehicles” I think it was something like 3 or 4 billion a year by which we are ripped off now.
Mind you as we are already getting shafted for fuel at over £5-00 a gallon, God only knows what we will be paying in 5 or 10 years. Where are you Dr Yogi when we need you?
Btw the biggest stakeholder in the roll out of electric charging points over here is – BP.
Naturally the power supply comes from fairy dust an unicorn farts.
I read that tesla is complaining about the weak supply of lithium for his batteries? And California said no to opening sites for mining. I also read that the EV market is based on the amount of lithium and other materials needed? The uk is seeing a massive recycling problem as old batteries are plying up, what would happen if the billions of cars/trucks/bikes all need batteries every 7-10 years? Tesla is 100km before they drop to 80% efficiency, but depends on when its charged and how long between the batteries being totally drained.
Not sure there are lithium shortages. A refining company in N Carolina is cutting back production as demand has been lagging. One example of many. https://www.planetizen.com/news/2019/09/106075-demand-lithium-drops-global-electric-vehicle-sales-slump
That could change is EV sales ever take off.
Wow – your “Tesla is 100km before they drop to 80% efficiency” threw me off until I realized you meant 100 k ‘miles’.
KaliforniaKook
Lol I was walking and typing on my phone… I meant tesla batteries last according to tesla, 100 thousand miles before the batteries drop to 80% efficiency, but it all depends on charge cycles and general use 😀 Tesla’s seem to have a lot.of problems, ranging from the motors to the 1000 dollar door handles 😐 ive read the battery packs are very expensive if the need came to replace them, having a warranty is a must.
I would almost guarantee that no Tesla battery will make that age spec with a lifetime of 80% quick charges. That is how most owners charge them particularly during trips. Quick charges are a no no with batteries, causes lots of heat stress and cooling issues.
Those high recharge cycle numbers rely on perfect charge and discharge cycles. Something that never happens in the real world.
Do ICE motors have an infinite life?
Talk about your non-sequitors.
Tesloop had one pack go 300,000 miles before 10% capacity loss. All charging was fast DC. Some packs reached that point at 100,000.
Becaue the packs have thousands of cells they often are mostly salvageable /rebuildable
Small mining companies here in Australia have been finding vast deposits of lithium ore (spodumene mainly). I haven’t been keeping track lately but I’d guess it’s up to around 10 million tonnes of lithium in the ground – about a billion tonnes of ore.
We aren’t going to run out of lithium, but processing is a different question entirely since the method for extraction is energy intensive and produces a lot of waste. Permitting and getting a mine going is another issue, as that can take a decade or more to get through all the opposition from environmental groups and indigenous groups.
Most of Australia’s lithium mines have recently shut down because there isn’t sufficient worldwide market for lithium from Australia right now.
Too expensive.
It’s actually the cobalt which is in short supply, price of lithium is down wiith so much more being produced.
That was very nicely put. Kudos!
I might be wrong but I did not see battery replacement in any of the numbers. Owning a gulf cart that has batteries makes the cost to charge them rather rather insignificant compared replacing them ever three years. Yes they are lead acid but to replace them with a lithium would three times the cost and I an not convince here in Arizona Lithium batteries will last three times as long.
Lead/Acid are a joke in a vehicle application. Their rating is given at 0.1C. Even in a golf cart they could be pulled at 5 times that and that kills their energy efficiency and their cycle life. To get reasonable cycle life a lead/acid should not be taken below 70% of charge; efficient cycle range is thus about 30% of rated charge. That rarely happens in a vehicle so they give appalling cycle life.
An LiFePO4 battery is rated at 0.5C and usually drained at less than that rate. If they are operated in the range 30% charge to 90% charge then they will give very good cycle life; maybe as high as 5000 cycles. Of the order of 10 times better than lead/acid.
A lead/acid road vehicle is not in any way viable. A lithium battery road vehicle is marginally viable if you can live with range anxiety.
Most electric vehicles in use are golf carts and industrial forklifts, they use lead acid batteries, and are good for about 20km…. Your comments don’t explain their success…
RickWill – I agree. Plus Lead-acid cells sulphate if not fully charged regularly, suffer from self discharge and the voltage sags a lot at high current
Getting 1,000,000 miles out of a vehicle over how many years? I suppose if it is operated like a taxi it might be possible here. Otherwise there is nothing left from all the salt we use here. I don’t think being electric reduces corrosion. The rear axle was ready to fall off my old Jeep after 15 years.
I have never passed the 110,000 mile mark. Four to eight years in the north winter application of fender-sol from the road is death to machines. Even in the south, the sun turns cars to trash in about the same time. Do you or your wife expect to be happy or even feel safe in a 40 year old car? At some point, the maintenance exceeds the replacement cost.
The numbers in this post are not believable. The assumptions absurd. The carbon cost to mine and refine are typically not counted in the lifetime impact. The dead batteries are not recyclable. I also know the maintenance costs for wind is never factored correctly. I worked building the remanufacturing facilities for the gear boxes. These fail well short of the claimed 30 year life. If subsidies and maintenance handled honestly as well as the line losses from remote sites these monsters are closed to zero gain.
My 1995 f150 has 315000 miles on it, but I live in the south.
My 2006 civic has 375,000 miles and they put truly ridiculous amounts of salt on the roads where I live.
The 1,000,000 miles estimate is for a fleet operated vehicle in Transportation as a Service (TAAS) operation. The assumption is that vehicle utilization will increase from ~2%/day for a private vehicle to ~20%/day (or more) for a fleet vehicle. Annual mileage will increase from nominally 15K to 150K, so figure vehicle life at about 7 years.
TAAS has got to have the automobile companies very worried. Total miles traveled is unlikely to increase very much, so increasing vehicle utilization by a factor of ten could depress vehicle sales 80-90%. I think this is why you see (for example) GM investing in Lyft. They need to have a foot in the door if TAAS truly takes off. Deriving all your income from vehicle sales could be a very bad business model.
Either TAAS is just another name for a mass transit system, or you’re not calculating vehicle mileage correctly. A private vehicle goes from A to B and waits to return. A taxi-like TAAS vehicle needs to get from C to A to start with, winds up at B, with the next pickup at D. Roughly twice the total vehicle miles (twice the traffic?) nest-ce pas?
Here’s the way I expect it to work:
1) Small (single-seat or two-seat) cars travel within neighborhoods, and pick up individuals to deposit them at main roads. The main roads have almost exclusively mini-vans or mini-buses. The mini-vans or mini-buses make almost no stops on the way to some destination. At the mini-van or mini-truck’s destination, passengers make disembark to another small car that takes them to their final destination, or the mini-van or mini-truck’s destination may be the final destination for all the passengers.
For example, picture a high school, college, or professional athletic event. Small cars pick people up to take them to where other people are also being delivered in small cars. The passengers debark into a mini-van or mini-bus to take them to the game. They all get out at the entrance of the athletic venue.
It’s not really either automated taxis or automated mass-transit. It’s a combination of the two…but a key point is that there is very little delay either waiting for the small car to pick each person up, or the delay in getting out of each little car and into the mini-van or mini-truck.
Think of it as a tree. People get on at the leaves, they get a ride to the trunk. The get in a mini-van or mini-bus they takes them down the trunk to the ground. (In other cases, the ground might simply be a second stop to get a small-car ride to the end of a root down underground.)
P.S. Another thing…the mini-vans or mini-buses are *flying* (figuratively). Speeds of 100+ mph would be common on most of the main roads, such as interstates.
I think total vehicle miles traveled could as much as double. But you’re right…if vehicle utilization increases by a factor of 6-10, sales are still greatly depressed.
Further, I expect the trend toward *type* of vehicle to shift dramatically towards smaller cars. For example, I don’t think there’s a single mass-production model in the U.S. that has only one seat. But since most travel is currently by a single passenger (i.e., the driver), it would make sense to have a lot of single-seat, or at least only-two-seat cars. Those single-seat cars could also be exclusively focused on short trips at low speeds. The resulting car design might easily cost less than $10,000 new. It’s tough to make much profit on a sub-$10,000 car.
The average commuter will drive 15,000 miles a year here in CA. You had better like your car because it will last you 67 years.
Such high life use vehicles are surely relegated to TAAS or taxis.
What exactly will drive the need for 1,000,000 miles? Power train? Batteries? Physical vehicle structure? Suspension?
Composite frames are relatively impervious to water corrosion, but the resins are thermoset plastic with relatively low high temperature capabilities (best materials max operating temp 650 °F while most are near 300 °F)) and are not impervious to thermal degradation and radiation exposure. Just ask the Swedes about making ships which couldn’t sail into tropical waters. (they’ve learned their lesson)
How long do you expect to operate a TAAS?
I was the lead designer for a project back in 1985 called ATTB (Advanced Technology Transit Bus). All composite structure, weighed far less than a conventional metal frame, lasted for a very long time….but the interiors, glazing, flooring, etc. would NOT last all that long.
I suppose if you never want to change the style of the iconic London cabs…
Most materials will not last that long with continued exposure and use. Interior fabrics will not. Most plastic materials or synthetic rubber will not.
Rocketscientist,
I am assuming these high mileage vehicles will be limited to TAAS. You are correct that the engineering standards for vehicles in high mileage services will not be anything like your personal car. I am assuming that TAAS fleet owners will drive vehicle mileage as high as possible as this makes economic sense; they will be willing to pay a premium for a more robustly engineered vehicle to manage fleet turnover. This assumption may prove to be totally wrong. Only time will tell, but it will be very interesting to see how this plays out over the next 20+ years. However for the purposes of this screening study it allowed me to discount the very real cost difference between ICE and electric vehicles. This actually tilts the playing field towards EV’s.
Commercial aircraft interiors are usually upgraded/replaced several times during 20 year operational life of 757, 737, 767, A319/320, etc. Avionics usually are too the support new requirements like TCAS, etc.
These fleet vehicles could be the same, a niche entrepreneurial startup opportunity for vehicle upgraders contracting to TAAS providers to keep their cars looking nice and new on the inside, while everything else, like motor, chassis remains the same.
You make a good point, but airliners are flying a lot more than 20 years on average.
Until we find a like replacement for fossil fuels going all electric is a non starter. Range, charge time, charge point availability (especially remote locations), and applications (think construction,farm equipment, flight, ocean travel) going all electric could be catastrophic.
The replacement of the infrastructure across the country will be enormous to replace all those gas stations
Where is that in the calculations?
EV ‘infrastructure’ is not that big a deal – nearly all charging is done slowly, anywhere there is enough electricity to run a clothes dryer and space to park a car.
Competition, leaks, fire regulations, actual fires, and changing streets & roads change old traffic patterns and create new markets that already lead to old gas stations being ripped out and new ones built all the time.
The economy is hardly at risk, EV’s still have tires, accessory batteries, and windshield wipers, and people still buy food.
Probably a tax on annual vehicle registration is needed, maybe based on GVW and odometer distance, and they could budget to tar the eleven-year-old cracks in Alberta’s secondary highways. But probably all the money has to be added to the stack going to Quebec.
Besides fuel costs, there are physical limitations to EVs. US drivers love their trucks and SUVs. It takes a lot of batteries to push an SUV which is heavy and not aerodynamic. Batteries just add to the weight making the vehicle less pleasing to drive.
Given your assumptions about the absence of government mandates, I do not foresee the public giving up their SUVs for electrics. The quest for electric commercial trucking is even more far-fetched.
The gross vehicle weight rating of the smallest Ford F150 is 6100 pounds. The largest Tesla weighs a little over 4600 pounds. You can supposedly go 370 miles on a single charge in that model Tesla. I have no idea how to calculate the miles you could drive if the vehicle’s weight is increased by a third, but you can easily drive more than 400 miles on a single tank of gas in the 150. If EVs can’t do what the smallest F150 can do, they aren’t going to make much of an impact on pickup and SUV sales.
As I understood it a Tesla’s range was affected to a considerable degree by the conditions one is driving in.
How does a sunny day in California compare with a winter day in Northern states with lights on and the heater going full blast?
Another point as to consumables even on EVs. Tyres do not like being left out in the sun, so if you want a set of tyres to last, especially in warm sunny California, you will surely need to cover them each time you park up for any length of time?
Forget batteries. They are heavy, last 4 years, while fuel cells last 9, and they give a driving range of 250 -350 miles. They are sold today in California, and would catch on elsewhere with more fueling stations. The fuel up quickly (you don’t have to sit there for hours while your batteries charge). They are clean. They will eventually sell themselves without subsidies. We’ll run out of lithium long before we run out of hydrogen. To bad for the petroleum industry, ‘tho.
Fuel cells are very expensive. They are only used when other sources of energy are uneconomic, like on space craft. They are efficient. They also get around the other elephant in the room: vehicle range and refueling time.
You are right about initial cost, still high. But for comparison purposes with the data in the following URL, driving 15,000 miles in a gasoline fueled vehicle getting 15 miles to the gallon on fuel costing $3.60/gallon (Los Angeles prices) would cost $3600. Once FC cars are mass produced and refueling is available nationally, which will take time, fuel cell cars will be a very attractive option.
https://fueleconomy.gov/feg/fcv_sbs.shtml
Pochas, perhaps you could repeat the economic feasibilty study for fuel cells
What production method do you propose for supplying all the hydrogen that would be required? Not being sarcastic or disagreeable; I’ve just always understood that it was energy intensive. I suspect it would only make sense in a wide-scale deployment if nukes generated the power needed.
Personally, I would have a problem with its storage, and the permeability of the tank. I have a 2001 Honda S-2000 with less than 11,000 miled on it. If it used a fuel cell, I would suspect the tank would always be empty every time I tried to drive it.
jtom,
There are two ways to make hydrogen: 1) steam reforming using fossil fuels (usually methane) or 2) dissociation of water using electricity. Assuming we go with option 2 and we use wind/solar to generate the electricity the cost at the wheel will likely be very close to the cost for EV’s using electricity sourced from wind/solar. We can drop the cost of batteries for storing electricity (the energy is stored in the hydrogen) but have to substitute the cost of generating hydrogen, including the ~30% energy loss in the conversion process.
I think you need to do a little calculation as to how much solar and wind power will be required. Hydrolysis is very energy intensive, and you will need to produce enormous amounts of hydrogen if you plan to use it to fuel millions of vehicles.
I would be stunned if it were even technologically feasible (i.e., more turbines and solar panels needed than possible to fabricate), much less the economically feasible..
I’ll take a pass.
Electrolysis, not hydrolysis. Sigh.
Les… You need some Yogi Berra references…
The math of EV’s does get quite bizarre when you scale them up.
A 2017 UBS report forecast that 45.6 million EV’s would be sold from 2014-2025. If UBS’s global EV production forecast is accurate, lithium and cobalt production will have to roughly double relative to 2014. The cumulative consumption of lithium from 2014-2015 will be equivalent to 69% of 2015 proved reserves. Cobalt consumption will be equivalent to 47% of proved reserves. This sort of production is not impossible; but it will be highly disruptive, particularly since most cobalt production is a byproduct of copper and nickel mining. According to the IEA…
“In order to limit temperature increases to below 2 degrees Celsius by the end of the century, the number of electric cars will need to reach 600 million by 2040”.
600 million EV’s would consume 907% of the 2015 proved lithium reserves and 615% of the 2015 proved cobalt reserves. That’s a lot. That’s disruptive.
615% of 7,000,000 metric tons is over 43,000,000 metric tons. This not only exceeds the 2015 proved reserves of cobalt, it exceeds the identified terrestrial resource potential…
EV fans must also be YUGE fans of mining.
Dangit, David, now I don’t know what to think. I am profoundly against Green Weenies and their EV’s, and Bird Choppers, and Bird Smokers, and… wait a minute, mining? I am personally strongly in favor of mining. Shortfalls of cobalt and lithium? No problem, I can find more. Consider me confused and conflicted in Argentina, where there is a lot of lithium and redbed copper-cobalt-vanadium deposits.
The point is to dispel the political myths, overcome the appeals to empathy, and restore an objective basis to judge the fitness of each option on its merits as it is suitable to purpose. From recovery to reclamation, every option, including the so-called “Green” solutions, have an impact on the environment, sustainability, and humanity, and some shared (e.g. raw resources).
I think the USGS might have already counted that as part of their resource estimate… But it is hilarious. The Green Weenies probably don’t have the slightest clue that their eco-friendly batteries come from mining operations… which I have no doubt, they hate mining as much as they hate fossil fuels.
Food comes from grocery stores and cars come from factories.
Obviously no mining involved. /sarc
Over closer to 1M miles, I would expect maintenance costs to be a big difference and at few EV battery replacements along the way…big $$$, possibly as much as the cost of a comparable ICE each time. Replacing a hybrid battery back is bad enough…replacing the battery packs in an EV is immense.
1M miles at 30 mpg is $80k at $2.40/gal. Purchase price and maintenance/major replacement costs should be part of a life-cycle analysis.
Tesla Model 3 replacement battery cost between $3K and $7K (depending on size or range) with a battery lifetime of 300K to 500K miles. A lot cheaper than a new engine every 250K miles. Much simpler (low labor cost) than an IC engine replacement.
Also, no transmission to maintain or replace.
Google says: “The Model 3’s battery pack, which has four battery modules, is guaranteed to keep the 70% of its capacity for 100,000 miles. The warranty for the long-range Model 3 battery is 120,000 miles.”
“Tesla Puts Price on Model 3 Battery Module Replacement Around $5000-$7000. Elon Musk suggests battery modules will cost between $5000-$7000.”
A quote from Cleantechnica gives much better numbers—but it isn’t backing them up with a warranty.
“A lot cheaper than a new engine every 250K miles.”
Reconditioned engines can be had for very reasonable prices.
Warranty is not projected lifetime.
Most cars today are warranted for only 36 months or 36k miles. The average car today lasts at least 300k miles and 15 years.
“1M miles at 30 mpg is $80k at $2.40/gal.”
Toyota’s new Dynamic Force engine gets 40 MPG; Mazda’s new Skyactiv-X engine (in its 2020 Mazda 3) gets 45.
Now try factoring in the 60% tax on petrol and diesel, that we have in Europe. Apply that to electric cars, and see how the figures work out.
Ralph
Of course government interference in markets can drive irrational inefficient behavior, but it can only go so far. The article makes a strong case that no matter what penalties and incentives are applied, the task of replacing 85% of energy use is technically infeasible. So what you would get is a large part of the population denied access to transportation. (But with the complete shutdown of the economy, who needs transportation anyway?)
You can pass a law or issue a regulation that everyone must ride unicorns to work. That doesn’t mean that everyone will ride unicorns to work. It means that nobody gets to work.
You can say that you will eliminate fossil fuels by 2045 or 2030 or whatever. Why not tomorrow? Just cut all energy use by 85% and euthanize most of the population. Don’t even need to euthanize, they’ll die in the food riots or freeze to death when winter sets in.
No need. That tax will be paid on something if petrol and deisel go away. You don’t think government will take a pay cut, do you? Good chance it will be embedded in the price of EVs, more taxes on electricity, tolls, or a miles-driven tax. If they increase taxes on other things sufficiently to recover lost fuel taxes, then a great many people won’t be able to afford an EV.
Tax on road fuel in the UK is 200 %. Are you getting your % s mixed up?
He did say *Europe* not *UK* only. The Uk is on the more expensive end for road fuel, other European countries not as much. so it should not be too surprising to find the average across Europe as a whole might just be lower than that of the UK alone.
Question regarding natural gas vs gasoline: If things started to move to EVs fuelled by CCGT, would it be feasible to have natural gas extraction at current or higher levels with falling oil production? Or must we extract oil to get at the natural gas?
I think expecting oil production to decline if deisel and gasoline were forbidden might be a bad assumption.
Most everything we have is dependent upon oil-derived products. This civilization could not continue without them. The only thing I see happening is massive inflation on the prices of everything to cover the cost of production if oil companies no longer get revenues from fuels.
One thing never mentioned is jet fuel. I remember a glut of gasoline many years ago, because the need for jet fuel required refining more oil than what we needed for gasoline.
Mr. Middleton, if you read this, do you have any idea how much oil production could be curtailed if gasoline and diesel were no longer used, yet still produce enough to meet our needs for plastics, pharmaceuticals, fertilizers, jet fuel, etc.?
Observer,
Gas is found alone in dry gas fields. Gas and LPG is found in wet gas fields. Gas is usually co-produced in oil fields. If the oil is heavy enough co-produced gas is very limited. So the relative production of oil and gas can be tailored to the relative demands.
I would like to say that many well meaning enviromentalists severely underestimate what it takes to replace fossil fuels with “renewables”. But when you talk to them you find out that they have made no estimates at all and simply declare as an article of faith that “It can be done!” Then you have those that say since one household can easily transition to owning/operating an electric vehicle why there should be no problems doing this nationally!
We dont currently have any way of providing the power necessary for 50 to 80 million electric cars to hit the road on a daily basis. Not to generate it or to distribute it from the power station down to the individual level. There is no way electricity will stay in 10c to 15c per kwhr range with the mass adoption of electric vehicles. It doesnt matter the source.
Replacing current electricity with “renewables” is already challenging enough, adding electric cars to the mix only makes it that much harder.
Given the amount of on-street (daily and overnight) parking in most inner-city dormitory districts, how will such vehicles be charged? The distribution and emplacement of wiring would represent a problem of epic proportions.
They also have no clue how our modern agriculture industry works, the massive input of oil and nat gas at so many steps along the way. Nor have they considered how all those wonderous lettuces, fruits and veggies make it to the Fresh Produce section of their local grocer.
There has been a suggestion here in the UK that all EVs should have a green number plate which would identify them as being able to enter city centres without a congestion charge. One EV driver wrote to the Daily Telegraph supporting the idea so that when he was driving at 60 mph on the motorway other drivers would realise that he was doing that speed, instead of the legal 70 mph, because his battery ran flat at 70 whereas at 60 he could complete his journey successfully. Oh! The joys of EVs?????????
In the UK government collects just under £30 billion annually in vehicle fuel duty. Currently that sum is gradually replaced by road tax, which means that people who don’t drive much (often less well to do and elderly) will be disproportionately hit harder, since the road tax is a flat charge depending on type and age of vehicle. I currently pay £265 in vehicle excise duty but drive only about 1000 miles annually.
“Therefore the cost of gasoline is not likely to rise precipitously and drive the economics toward electric vehicles.”
The assumption that there will be no “Idiot Swans” flies in the face of probability, observation, and most importantly, history. I see this analysis by Detengineer as an example of historical uniformitarianism, linear out to decades. But history tells us that sudden, rapid changes are what drives deflections in history. It’s a non-linear bifurcation, completely unpredictable and in hindsight, hugely pivotal moments in history that define hostory.
There are true Black Swans, then there are also hints of “Black Sygnets” (baby swans).
“Black Sygnets” all around — waiting to blossom to full-fledged swans all around us, we just don’t know which one(s) will do anything or the timing and then how one affects the other. Or even a true Black Swan no one saw coming until its landed. If you’d made a prediction in 2007 that by 2019 the US would be undergoing an energy dominance revolution based on its domestic fossil fuel production, you’d have been laughed off the stage.
Just look at socialist Bernie or lying Pocahontas getting huge support within the ignorant masses of their political party running for President. Neither has much of a chance individually, but like some “quantum tunneling” effect, give them enough time and eventually one of these idiots gets elected, and then its lights-out as they screw the entire system with their politics of socilism.
Idiots in politics are everywhere, not just on the Left. Georgetown Texas has an idiot RINO Mayor. We see new idiots lining up on the Democrat’s side: Slimey Steyer, Nanny Bloomberg, maybe even Crooked Hilly, b/c the Left is so f-ed up even the Left sees it.
One look at California and its obvious the energy market there is set to crash the state’s economy in a sudden “sandpile” collapse, only the timing is unknown. What Cal Dems are doing to its energy market and electricity affordability is criminal and its ultimate effects are predictable, and yet they still keep digging that hole deeper with each passing week. In NY State, Retard Cuomo is demanding the gas company deliver non-existent nat gas to NYC customers, so that when a predictable week-long hard cold spell hits in mid-winter, his voters will freeze. Yet he’ll no doubt blame the gas company and probably get away with it because the reporters and editors in their media are too ignorant and politically-blinded to report at what is really happening.
Massachusetts, home to some of the best engineering and science universities in world, has two US Senators who are about as full retard on energy, engineering, and physics as one could get and still be able to form coherent sentences. Yet they keep re-electing them.
No, I find the assumption that there will be no Idiot Swans or Black swans coming at us dangerously naive.
I think the Cal Demos are more like ostriches, the mythical ones:
https://www.wonderopolis.org/wonder/do-ostriches-really-bury-their-heads-in-the-sand
Joel,
You are absolutely right – the probability of an Idiot Swan event is way too high. (I had another name for “Idiot Swan” but figured the name wouldn’t pass the PC police. Use your imagination.) I’m seriously wondering what my exit strategy is going to be if the Dems wet dreams come true. My extremely liberal siblings tell me they don’t think the Dems will go Full Retard, but I’d rather not bank on them not jumping over the cliff given the opportunity. (I wish I had Dave M’s video skills – this calls for the Full Retard video now.)
The purpose behind assumptions is to lay out under what circumstances the analysis that follows might be true. Take them with as big or small a grain of salt you choose. The two things I can say with reasonable certainty is:
1. If the politicians don’t go Full Retard EV’s will not dominate the market anytime soon.
2. If the politicians do go Full Retard horses will dominate the much smaller market.
one thing I see often in these comparisons is ICE efficiency, and its low while I think the low figure is somewhat misleading.
the figure is due to the heat/thermal properties yet the figures never account for the fact that the waste heat is used to make fuel mixtures (normal o2/gas/diesel as well as ethanol blends) in cars work (brings block to specific temps) as well as actually heat the car. up here in cold climates that is very critical.
honestly I wish more time had been spent in the past engineering a diesel electric hybrid (ICE driven generator powering traction motor(s) ) that scaled down to personal vehicle size (locomotive size just a touch too big LOL ) over battery/fuel cell systems.
They exists today. Buy a hybrid and sell the batteries, except the start battery of cause.
However, the ICE-electric system is more expensive than mechanical drive. When you use it on locomotives, it is because you want an all-wheel drive, no clutch and RPM relative to the power needed.
ever here of a-1-a axle?
unpowered axles in middle.
early GE U25 had a non-notched throttle also.
You make a good point about why a diesel electric hybrid was never developed. A super efficient micro diesel ICE that weighed a few hundred pounds, say maybe 15-20 Kw, would supply some onboard charging for range extension, as well as thermal heat to keep the batteries and cabin warm in winter. Then you could actually have a pick-up truck that would double as a huge battery/generator for off grid work or living. Could also probably reduce the battery weight a bit to make up for the additional weight of a micro diesel ICE. Then you have a half chance at being able to have a functional motor vehicle comparative to the the functionality of a traditional gas/diesel vehicle. When I can buy one of these, then I am all in.
My Chevy Volt is an ICE Generator (maybe 80kw) and Battery system, works great, expensive tech and GM killed it this year. I think Honda may have a similar system but I am unsure
Mitsubishi has an Outlander PHEV, Toyota has the Prius Prime and soon the RAV, Honda has a plugin hybrid / EV, etc, etc.
But who cares that GM stopped making the Volt if you have one and it suits your needs? (and even GM has a few left)
An excellent and convincing analysis by Detengineer!
Thanks for reposting it here as a separate article, as I had not seen this previously. I’ll circulate this to other engineer family and friends, for value added discussions during deer hunting get-togethers and over coffee and pie at their Thanksgiving dinner tables!
Hold on there a minute, you gloom and doomsayers!!! Sheesh! What planets are you living on, anyway? It’s like you’re ALL living in a cave, watching B&W TV shows or something.
If you did a little digging, you’d know that cities like Chicago have had electric systems in place since the 1893 World’s Fair. The 3rd rail system for the El has been a large part of that for decades, and gets regular updates. There are also the commuter train lines run by Metra that are NOT diesel, but powered by electricity from either the third rail system or an overhead network of power lines, like the South Shore line. That has also been going on since red beans and rice were invented, and there are other cities besides Chicago that use the same systems to run their public transportation. I took the Metra trains to and from the city every working day after I moved to the ‘burbs, and I took the buses to work instead of driving because parking in Chicago is highway robbery! Some CTA buses and the PACE buses in the suburbs run on compressed natural gas and have done so since 1915 because it’s cheaper than diesel.
I do’t know what planet you’re living on but you need to look around a little more. Try digging a little deeper next time. You’ll get some surprises.
GAAHHHH!! 1915 should be 1960s!!!! (Fumblefinger typing again.)
But what does any of that have to do with the article Sara?
Oh, gee whiz, I thought it was clear: in public transportation, the use of electricity and natgas as a means of moving vehicles and people has been in use for decades.
There’s ZERO need to anything about it. This has been in place for years, in fact, for decades. No fanfare, no shouting and waving, no virtue signaling – none of that. And frankly, public transportation is a better way to move people around in cities than using individual POVs.
No, not clear. Not clear at all. The article is about how something that is technically feasible is practically impossible. And also about how something that looks to be cost-effective with current supply/demand will become non-competitive when you radically shift the supply and demand curves and try to do it in an impossibly short timeframe.
You can theoretically walk to the top of the Empire State building on the stairs. Can you or anyone do it in 30 seconds?
Nobody said that it is impossible to have SOME electric cars. Obviously we already have some, what about 1-2% of new cars, maybe 0.25% of the total fleet? The issue at hand is what it would take to support replacing ALL internal combustion engines with battery-powered motors and keep all those millions of vehicles charged on an infrastructure that currently can’t come close to supporting it.
How can you use mass transit for the significant % of the population that lives outside of cities? You can’t. The capital costs of putting mass transit where there isn’t a critical mass of population would be outrageous.
Sara, I am going to assume ignorance, which is curable – rather than idiocy, which is not.
Do you live in a house? If so, go take a look at your breaker box. (If not, there are pictures aplenty of them online.) Notice that there are several differently sized breakers – usually 15A, 20A, 30A, and maybe one or two 50A or higher. Those are to power specific lines in the building, lines that can only carry that much power. This is why you cannot just move your laundry room (with the stuff that connects to that high amperage line) to another part of the house – at least not without paying for a very good Christmas indeed for your electrician.
The same thing applies to city electric grids. A major part of the expense in installing an electric transportation systems (such as light rail) is laying in the lines to power the things. (Plus the maintenance – high voltage / amperage lines are far more expensive to keep up.) The ones that are already laid down in the cities are capable of powering those systems – but not anything else. You have to lay down new lines if you want to supply the power demands of many thousands of electric vehicles – or to supply the even larger electrical demands if everyone moves to all-electric domiciles, for that matter.
As to “better way to move people around in cities” – in some cities, in some circumstances, for some people. Dense-pack cities? Yes. Work schedules that are predictable and fall within the “rush hour” range? Yes. Able to access the required pick-up and drop-off points? Yes. However, those do not apply to an extremely large slice of the population – and never will.
The all electric Pennsylvania RR was converted to diesel electric
No. The electric portion of the PRR ran from NYC to Washington, DC, and from Philadelphia to Harrisburg, with a few secondary routes in the same area. Most, if not all, of that electric railway is still in place. It’s called AMTRAK from NYC to DC, and, I believe, SEPTA runs the section between Philly and HBG. And diesel-powered trains run on those tracks, as well.
Catcracking, same w/the old Virginian RR in southwest VA — their electrified portion went out of business competing w/the adjacent steam then diesel-electric Norfolk & Western line in the mid-1950s.
The London Underground railway system has run on electricity for years, and is the main way many Average JoesJoesses get to work.
The Extinction Rebellion mob had the bright idea the other day to glue themselves to the roof of a train and this upset the commuters waiting for the train who pulled the activists off the roof and allegedly gave them a good slapping.
Yet this is one of the means of transport ER are proposing we will all have to use, or else walk and cycle to work.
It’s amazing watching everything be made unnecessarily complex and expensive because of a non-problem that none of you would even be alive to see anyway if it did happen, but it won’t. Blind faith.
Every innovation and scientific upheaval in history has challenged underlying assumptions that were being taken for granted. It is unchallenged assumptions that blinds scientists to progress even when they are trying be faithful to the scientific method. We have to challenge assumptions. Scientists and enginees not challenging assumptions of “climate science” from the climate charlatans and carnival barkers is what has brought this entire heaping mountain of Climate Change feces into creation.
Every bit of the Green Tech schist the Left is promoting depends on massively increasing the mined mineral resources. Copper, cobalt, lithium, rare earths. None of that can be done without fossil fuels at every step of extraction to refinement. The Greens make hugely ignorant, hidden assumptions about those metals and minerals future availability to support their claims of 50% (or 100%) renewable by some arbitrary, politically chosen date to achieve another politically chosen arbitrary global temperature rise. The temp rise itself based on hand-tuned Cargo Cult junk climate models full of their own unjustified/unvalidated assumptions.
Every physicist before Einstein thought time was constant no matter the reference frame. That mass was constant regardless of how fast it moved. That bacteria couldn’t thrive and grow in the low-pH acidity of the stomach. That having CO2 near biological starvation was good for the climate of the planet. So many bad, false assumptions.
“To eliminate fossil fuels in transportation and electrical power generation by 2050 we need to invest $1 – 1.5 trillion every year,”
The colossal blunder in logic is threefold : 1) that automakes wil continue to build gas powerd vehciles beyond 2024 in any significant numbers. 2) that the increased need for non-fossil fueled generated electricity will result in higher electric prices – that depends upon a renewable generation future ( i believe the development of gen 4 nuclear SMR reactors will prevail – it should be noted that adoption of no carbon generation, resulting from the current light water nuclear and hydro of 30%, augmented by 70% Gen 4 nuclear would cost LESS than one trillion and will produce electrc prices cheaper than current prices )
3) that electric vehicles have advantages over gas powered cars in terms of maintenance costs and drivetrain
longetivity, which is far greater that gas powered cars
You’re funny ColMosby.
Your #1 has zero probability. Just saying such nonsense doesn’t make it true. It is so ignorantly wrong, it’s not even worth a detailed rebuttal.
Your #2) Gen4 at commercial scale is only a concept on paper, and commercial-scale nuclear plants take 15-20 years of planning, permitting and construction even when the design is known. So just because you “believe” something doesn’t make it reality.
Your #3) ignores the EV’s achilles heel. The battery and its lifespan, disposal, and cost of replacement.
And all those NorCal EV owners found out how quickly relying on grid power (regardless of generation source) to charge their cars can turn into a colossal mistake. Another problem with EVs is the batteries are really bad at delivering current in cold climates, again limiting adoption.
The future likely won’t play out like Detengineer describes above, but it has a far better likelihood than any of your 3 listed.
The blunder in reality is yours Col.
Really.
I will second that Joel. If electrical and electronic drive systems were anywhere near that reliable I would not have had a job for the last 35 years.
CM thinks because some car companies have said that they will electrify their entire fleets by 2024, that means all will be EVs. It doesn’t. Most will be hybrids.
The auto manufacturers are free to say whatever they want, ultimately it will be the consumers that decide and so far EV’s have gotten a lukewarm welcome at best. It wasn’t too long ago that the manufacturers and government (US) said no more SUV’s and we all know how well that went over.
Jim M – you might like to look up the sales numbers of the Tesla model 3 versus the Mustang and the BMW 3 series. The Tesla has wiped the floor with the other two this year
Above all, let’s not let the government force it. Let the people say what they want and can afford and let industry provide.