Hey Andy:I thought I would share this video for those that think ”oil bad”.
C series 2.0There's a funny (sad) story up here in Canada, the governments invested (donations really...) to have a company make electric school buses. Then they also gave huge subsidies to busineses to buy the buses while also footing a huge part of the cost of installing charging stations...then they are surprised demand dries up the minute they stop paying. They created the demand from thin air and it evaporates just as fast. It has to be market demand. Stop picking winners and loosers!!!

There was a school district here in the U.S. that tried EV buses. It failed after spending big money. If there’s no electrical grid advancement true EV’s ain’t gonna make it. Filling stations back in the early days were easy and inexpensive, hence the ridiculously rapid growth of the ice automobiles. Running wires and building power plants is ridiculously expensive. Not to mention the watts per mile IMO will be just as expensive as gasoline or more. I don’t think EVs are the future. I think it’s neat tech, but that’s about it. Without govt. subsidies I think EVs die a slow death. NY Governor wants to EV the whole School bus fleet at a price tag of $20 billion u.s. which includes cost of vehicles and infrastructure to charge them. It’s easy to spend other people’s money when there are no consequences.There's a funny (sad) story up here in Canada, the governments invested (donations really...) to have a company make electric school buses. Then they also gave huge subsidies to busineses to buy the buses while also footing a huge part of the cost of installing charging stations...then they are surprised demand dries up the minute they stop paying. They created the demand from thin air and it evaporates just as fast. It has to be market demand. Stop picking winners and loosers!!!
I have no idea what a free market for transportation would even look like. It's been messed with so much by both public and private entities over the last century+.There is some big thumbs on the free market scale, not sure they are all for the reported reason.
There was a school district here in the U.S. that tried EV buses. It failed after spending big money. If there’s no electrical grid advancement true EV’s ain’t gonna make it. Filling stations back in the early days were easy and inexpensive, hence the ridiculously rapid growth of the ice automobiles. Running wires and building power plants is ridiculously expensive. Not to mention the watts per mile IMO will be just as expensive as gasoline or more. I don’t think EVs are the future. I think it’s neat tech, but that’s about it. Without govt. subsidies I think EVs die a slow death. NY Governor wants to EV the whole School bus fleet at a price tag of $20 billion u.s. which includes cost of vehicles and infrastructure to charge them. It’s easy to spend other people’s money when there are no consequences.
It I think you are mixing some stuff. Working on improving your market share is one thing, creating law and program to sway some one else market in a different direction is putting your thumb on the scale.I have no idea what a free market for transportation would even look like. It's been messed with so much by both public and private entities over the last century+.
It's been affected by things like:
-Fossil fuel companies buying up patents on alternative fuels/vehicles and killing them.
-Government regulations on MPG for different vehicle classes. Know why we have so many crossovers and almost no cars anymore? SUVs have different MPG requirements. A manufacturer can take a car that doesn't meet requirements, lift it 2 inches and add AWD and voila! Now it gets 2 MPG worse but meets standards for SUVs. A regulation meant to reduce greenhouse gas emissions just increased them.
-Government regulations on MPG for different vehicle sizes. Know why a 1500 pickup today is bigger than a 3500 from 20 years ago? MPG requirements for light trucks are tied to vehicle footprint. A manufacturer can take a truck that doesn't meet requirements, make it a couple inches wider and a couple of inches longer and voila! Now it gets 2 MPG worse but meets standards for light trucks. A regulation meant to reduce greenhouse gas emissions just increased them. Where have I seen that before?
-Legacy auto manufacturers collaborating with fossil fuel companies on the above.
-Legacy auto manufacturers dumping a bunch of money to block public transportation infrastructure.
-New auto manufacturers (e.g. Tesla) leveraging their "green" image and political clout to block public transportation infrastructure.
-Government EV initiatives (even if giving them the full benefit of the doubt, still likely an overcompensation).
-Decades of government subsidies to the fossil fuel industry.
-EPA regulations inhibiting domestic mining of lithium which ends up increasing the carbon footprint of EV production and producing a borderline humanitarian crisis in the places where it is mined.
-Carbon credits
The list goes on.
In a true open transportation market, EV tech would probably be decades ahead of where it is today, hydrogen would probably be reasonably widespread, vehicles with a variety of fuel sources would be sharing the roads, and public transportation infrastructure would probably be good enough that vehicles with a big carbon footprint wouldn't even be much of a problem because the carbon output of overall transportation would still be less than it is now.
Instead we have this.
Subsidy and tax break galore. I think none of that is needed.My debunk of this fallacious video:
EV's ARE simpler. This is fact, unquestionable by anyone honest and/or competent. The argument that the chemical processes in the battery are equivalently complex to the thousands of moving components on an ICE is straight up ludicrous. First, because the chemical process is a solid-state process in that it occurs naturally without requiring any external influence once the components required to make the natural process are assembled into the combination which causes them to occur. Stating that these systems require cooling to optimize their efficiency is not an example of systemic complexity - especially when these processes occur exponentially more in the reference system that is being touted as no worse. Overall, the vehicle is simpler in that there are far fewer mechanical interactions, virtually zero (comparatively speaking) moving parts, and the system interactions are much simpler in that you have far fewer material interactions to worry about things like galvanic interactions.
EV's extractive processes produce pollution elsewhere (implying ICEs do not) - this argument is constantly used to say that "EV's pollute more when being made by more than the fuel burned in ICEs" and rarely accounts for the construction of the ICE. Sure, an EV will require mining more Lithium than an ICE, but an ICE will require more materials such as Aluminum, Iron, etc simply in the engines, let alone the rest of the drivetrain, etc. It also never accounts for the fact that EV batteries can now be recycled and up to 95%-99% of the material can be reused economically. No engine or drivetrain has that much recyclability.
The "EV sales slump is proof that people don't like them" is a fallacy that we all here should be intimately familiar with. EVs sales are no greater affected right now than ICE sales are simply as an effect of increased financing costs and increased overall vehicle cost relative to income.
The one true statement he made is that EVs aren't particularly "revolutionary" in that some of he first automobiles were EVs, and they came largely to a similar conclusion as most non-biased people today come to - EVs are really nice, but the energy storage technology still isn't at the level that hydrocarbons are, yet.
The most egregious fallacy though, is that only EVs are given tax benefits... The reality is that fossil fuels are far more heavily subsidized. Between 2021 and 2023 it's estimated that even before externalities, the fossil fuel industry in the US was subsidized by about $1200 billion dollars (yes 1.2 trillion, but here's why I used that number) compared to approximately $28 billion dollars for the EV industry. Even accounting for total subsidies since introduction in 2015, the best data that I can find shows less than $60 billion has ever been subsidied to EVs, but there's no definitve single source, just some quick math of many sources.
In case you think I am pulling information out of my ass, here are some of the sources used and you will note that I am using sources across multiple policital biases:
https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2023/08/24/fossil-fuel-subsidies-surged-to-record-7-trillion
https://www.eesi.org/papers/view/fa...-closer-look-at-tax-breaks-and-societal-costs
https://goodjobsfirst.org/report-at...c-vehicle-factory-subsidies-are-in-overdrive/
https://itrfoundation.org/the-recen...ies-for-electric-vehicles-and-semiconductors/
https://news.stanford.edu/stories/2024/10/electric-vehicle-subsidies-help-the-climate-u-s-automakers
https://afdc.energy.gov/vehicles/electric
https://subsidytracker.goodjobsfirst.org/