The Last Cowboy
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Joe
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2020
- Threads
- 35
- Messages
- 7,457
- Reaction score
- 14,734
- Location
- San Antonio, TX
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 JL Willys 2 door
- Occupation
- Straight shooter with a crooked grin
I have nothing against EVs. But I do have a problems with carbon credits, tax subsidies and mandates. Take those away and see if the EVs can compete. I believe that many legacy manufacturers are getting into the game to keep from having to buy carbon credits from other so called "green" companies.
There will always be a demand for gas engine vehicles in the "fly over" country and in the non coastal west. Range and charging are issues that have yet to be overcome. The promised battery revolution has yet to happen. With current and foreseeable tech, aging batteries will reduce range and replacing them will be a financial burden most can't live with. EVs for now, look to be more compatible with urban areas, or tightly spaced towns like much of the east coast has.
Gas engines will still be needed in the future. The way things look now, the current aggressive mandates will need to be adjusted or eliminated. Companies like Porsche, Mercedes and Toyota have already stated that they will continue to develop and produce gas and offer gas engines.
Also, consider that for now EVs are a market for home owners or business owners. The ability to have a charger installed depends on having a place to install one and the means to be charged for the kilowatt hours used. Apartment dwellers and those who rent houses will likely not have access to a charger as often as needed. And those 6 chargers at the mall will get packed pretty quick, with cars waiting.
Gas and diesel powered personal conveyances will be with us for quite some time. To ban registrations on them, at say 2035, would be foolish. It would take nearly new vehicles off the road and would leave the vast majority of the poor with no transportation at all. And let's say that they limited it to a certain GVWR, say 7000 lbs or so. Can you imagine the numbers large of trucks and SUVs that would sell?
Then there will be a problem of what to do with all of the gasoline and oil that will be stockpiling. Refining oil will not stop. Modern society relies on the spectrum of chemicals produced form crude oil. Plastics, synthetic, yes even "vegan leather" all come from crude oil. As a part of the refining process gasoline and diesel are produced. This can not be changed. Crude yields a spectrum, not just one thing. If you want plastics, synthetic rubber, tires, polyester, etc. gas and diesel are part of the mix. If we are truly concerned about the environment, we wouldn't just ship those fuels to overseas countries to just burn inefficiently would we? That's exactly what would happen. We have high emissions standards in the US and other developed countries do as well. Not so much in those countries that are defined by the UN as "developing". They have lowered standards and will continue to burn hydrocarbon fuels with little or no emissions standards or enforcement well into the future. In the end, the total global atmospheric environment suffers greater than it does now, and I haven't even touched on how to produce all of this new electricity demand.
Level the playing field, get meddling politicians out of the free market and let's see what happens. The best product will then prevail.
There will always be a demand for gas engine vehicles in the "fly over" country and in the non coastal west. Range and charging are issues that have yet to be overcome. The promised battery revolution has yet to happen. With current and foreseeable tech, aging batteries will reduce range and replacing them will be a financial burden most can't live with. EVs for now, look to be more compatible with urban areas, or tightly spaced towns like much of the east coast has.
Gas engines will still be needed in the future. The way things look now, the current aggressive mandates will need to be adjusted or eliminated. Companies like Porsche, Mercedes and Toyota have already stated that they will continue to develop and produce gas and offer gas engines.
Also, consider that for now EVs are a market for home owners or business owners. The ability to have a charger installed depends on having a place to install one and the means to be charged for the kilowatt hours used. Apartment dwellers and those who rent houses will likely not have access to a charger as often as needed. And those 6 chargers at the mall will get packed pretty quick, with cars waiting.
Gas and diesel powered personal conveyances will be with us for quite some time. To ban registrations on them, at say 2035, would be foolish. It would take nearly new vehicles off the road and would leave the vast majority of the poor with no transportation at all. And let's say that they limited it to a certain GVWR, say 7000 lbs or so. Can you imagine the numbers large of trucks and SUVs that would sell?
Then there will be a problem of what to do with all of the gasoline and oil that will be stockpiling. Refining oil will not stop. Modern society relies on the spectrum of chemicals produced form crude oil. Plastics, synthetic, yes even "vegan leather" all come from crude oil. As a part of the refining process gasoline and diesel are produced. This can not be changed. Crude yields a spectrum, not just one thing. If you want plastics, synthetic rubber, tires, polyester, etc. gas and diesel are part of the mix. If we are truly concerned about the environment, we wouldn't just ship those fuels to overseas countries to just burn inefficiently would we? That's exactly what would happen. We have high emissions standards in the US and other developed countries do as well. Not so much in those countries that are defined by the UN as "developing". They have lowered standards and will continue to burn hydrocarbon fuels with little or no emissions standards or enforcement well into the future. In the end, the total global atmospheric environment suffers greater than it does now, and I haven't even touched on how to produce all of this new electricity demand.
Level the playing field, get meddling politicians out of the free market and let's see what happens. The best product will then prevail.
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