of course they will, and this is why I used the term "environmentally unfriendly" when it comes to battery production. Google up where and how Lithium and Cobalt are mined, and the effects it has on the environment.
It is all about CARBON and global warming. And all they seem to spruke about is what comes out of the car once it is made. If you factor in the actual CARBON cost of:
Building the electric car including batteries.
Replacing the batteries say twice during the life of the car.
Recycling the batteries.
Maintaining the car just like you would a normal car (tyres, brakes etc).
Recycling the old cars that get forcibly made redundant.
AND most importantly, expanding the electricity network (producing poles, wires, insulators, cables, transformers, switchgear etc), building new power generation (be it coal, gas, solar, wind, whatever) AND running it.
Add all that up and I bet you could drive around in a 2000+ anything, buy all the fuel required, and maintain it until it is no longer viable you still would not emit as much carbon as the above creates. This is of course ignoring the original carbon emitted to build the existing cars. Sure as old cars die new ones being made electric makes sense, but there is still a massive carbon cost in the rest of the list.
In reality the mentality is the same as the people who buy a new car to save on fuel, it is false economy. Like the person I know who traded in a perfectly good V6 Prado for something like $20k on the same thing but a diesel and $70k to save fuel! Now they have to put up with the diesel, less power, 25c per litre more for fuel, the stink of the stuff when you fill it up and the higher maintenance cost over the next 10 years. One buggered DPF after warranty expires and there goes 3x the fuel savings!
Edited by user Thursday, 18 April 2019 11:33:51 AM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified