The link to the clip you provided states that as demand increases line loss on the electric grid increases. There is no data to show how a mass conversion to electric vehicles will impact that loss. You are only providing bits of information that the industry is feeding to you. Prove me wrong, show me a study of the impact of going all electric will have on the electric grid. Then when you've accomplished that show me a study of the environmental impact of producing and reclaiming hundreds of billions of lithium batteries.
Be wary of the half truths provided by those profiting from "change" and extend the logical trail where their explanations conveniently stop. Follow the money: fossil fuel is a mature industry battery powered cars are where the money is. Tesla doesn't make money from selling cars as much as they collect for regulatory credits. That's right government is picking winners and losers so if you trust government to do the right thing you will be for electric cars.
I’m not “for” anything. But your “follow the money” point is fair. The govt spends WAY more on oil wars and OMG subsidies/credits/incentives than on EV rebates so (by your logic) if you trust the govt you will be “for” a future of only ICE’s.
You’re falling for the fallacy that this is an immediate changeover with no grid or technology improvements. Of course the reality is it will take decades. CURRENTLY grid loss, at worst, is 20%. ICE’s are ~20% efficient and that’s NOT including the cost of wars, drilling, transportation, refining and 3X CO2 output.
Today, 40% of electricity is generated by renewables or nuclear. That has increased 100% since 2000. That growth isn’t slowing.
Batteries undoubtedly messy and costly but recycling is largely dependent on scale and the secondary market for them (including home energy storage) is part of that future lifecycle.
https://techcrunch.com/2021/04/06/giving-ev-batteries-a-second-life-for-sustainability-and-profit/
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