Posted on 10/01/2016 10:29:11 AM PDT by Olog-hai
The large scale roll-out of electric cars on EU roads will help fight climate change but more electricity will have to be generated to power the vehicles which, the European Environment Agency (EEA) has warned, could have its own impact on global warming.
The European Environment Agency this week said that larger numbers of electric vehicles will not be enough to make to the transition to a low-carbon economy. The EUs transport sector still depends on oil for 94% of its energy needs.
The reductions in carbon dioxide emissions in road transport gained from the scaling-up of electric vehicles would outweigh emissions caused by the continued use of fossil fuels to generate the extra power needed to keep the cars on the road, the EEA said in a report.
But in countries where more electricity is generated through polluting fossil fuels, the environmental benefits will be lower, according to its analysis.
(Excerpt) Read more at euractiv.com ...
She got confused between airplanes and bumblebees.
It doesn’t matter a lick unless someone gets beyone lithium batteries. As Elon Musk himself says, Tesla itself will consume the worlds lithium supply in one year once full production is achieved. The price of batteries is approaching the point where electric cars no longer are viable.
ROFL
The obvious solution: build more nuclear power plants.
And not merely nuclear power plants, but Thorium-fueled Molten Salt plants. They have huge advantages over Uranium-Fueled Light Water plants, not the least of which is that they are not capable of core meltdown. They get too hot, the molten Salt merely leaks out of the jacket, into the containment basin, no spewing of vast quantities of radioactive compounds all over the neighborhood. There is much more thorium in the earth’s crust (some four times as much) as uranium, it is not nearly so hard to process, and it does not become fissile on its own. The thorium reaction REQUIRES the presence of some quantity of “spent” uranium fuel rods, to initiate the fissile chain reaction.
And they can be built so much more quickly than uranium plants, because of the size (Thorium plants may be scaled to much smaller size than uranium plants), and also because huge steam release containment vessels are not necessary.
The engineering was done years ago, the design is feasible, and the plants may be located much closer to the point of end use than Uranium plants, because of the relative safety factor. You know why the thorium plants are not in much wider use? Because they do not produce plutonium (nuclear bomb material), and uranium plants do, which makes the uranium plant valuable as a weapons grade material source.
“What? Have the Unicorns quit jogging on their treadmills?”
Treadmills? I thought they pooped rainbow skittles that were used in cold fusion reactors.
Yeah, you want your neighbors to know it’s you crashing the grid when you plug in your Volt.
There are ways to vastly increase the production and distribution of hydrogen fuel, but there has not yet been enough infrastructure developed.
__________________________________________
It takes a lot of energy to produce hydrogen as well. It doesn’t come out of thin air.
The cheapest method to produce hydrogen gas is the steam reformation process, where methane is reacted with high-temperature steam in the presence of a nickel catalyst (produces hydrogen and carbon monoxide) with a secondary reaction between the resultant carbon monoxide and steam over metal oxides (usually iron oxide) to yield carbon dioxide and hydrogen gas. Thanks to the global warming liars in government, the additional expense of carbon dioxide sequestration eats up revenue unnecessarily.
Global Warming on Free Republic here, here and here
Sounds like a winner.
Aside from the nuclear weapon fuel, how much does preserving energy monopolies for companies like Duke Energy have to do with the freeze on building?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.