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[Technology] Petrol and diesel cars banned from 2035...



Hugo Rune

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 23, 2012
21,676
Brighton
Up to 15 years of exhaust pollution to come, marvellous. Appreciate there is no quick fix and these things need phasing in slowly for many logistical reasons. Hopefully within 10 years most petrol and diesel cars will be gone.

This.

It’s a climate emergency FFS. Give the car companies 5 years or 10 at the most. I see brands like Volvo are already ahead of the curve on this.
 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
35,332
This.

It’s a climate emergency FFS. Give the car companies 5 years or 10 at the most. I see brands like Volvo are already ahead of the curve on this.

the infrastructure and physics are not problems the car companies can solve.
 


GT49er

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2009
46,830
Gloucester
I wonder what will they do with all the diesel, petrol and hybrid cars which have been manufactured but not yet sold when the ban kicks in? Maybe ship them to other countries which are left-hand-drive..

We carry on driving them until they finally croak.
 


GT49er

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2009
46,830
Gloucester
So you don't think there will be any advances in battery technology in the next 15 years, to enable an electric car to sit in low power mode for a long time?
Of course there will. Just in time for us to realise in 2035 we suddenly have a worldwide pollution problem with toxic, un-recyclable used batteries!
 
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southstandandy

WEST STAND ANDY
Jul 9, 2003
5,662
Agreed. And the first question would be how on earth can a charging infrastructure be rolled out in 15 years ? Imagine many of the streets of Brighton and Hove where people have to park a couple of streets away from their house - that's a lot of very long extension cables required.

No problem for me - I've got a box in the loft with loads of unused extension cables. I could link them all together and reckon I could at least reach the next street!
 






zefarelly

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
21,861
Sussex, by the sea
I think this is all bullshit and bluster, not so say it doesn't need doing . . . . . there are millions of cars all over the world . . . . we have 6 . . . . 4 of them between 57-63 years old, they're not going to disappear in a hurry and they'll outlive me.

add to that bikes and scooters . . . . . massively increasing fuel tax will do the job, but not without producing sufficient viable alternatives . . . as it stands we can't even build a basic railway line so It aint going to happen in 15 years.
 






beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
35,332
That is a very defeatist attitude. With enough belief we can do ANYTHING.

its realism, understanding the scale of the problems. as posted:

There will need to be a massive upgrade of the UK's power network.
A quick "fag packet" calculation shows we will need to more than double our generation capacity to support large scale electric car charging.

We are, at the time of this post, using 43GW (http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/). There are 32.5 million cars in the UK, if 25% want to charge overnight using a 7kW charging point, they will need 56GW to be supplied. That's the equivalent of 50 nuclear power stations or 143 Rampion wind farms.

That's going to cost a few quid....

car companies are not going to be building power stations and upgrading national grid and local electric distribution.
 


Coldeanseagull

Opinionated
Mar 13, 2013
7,791
Coldean
I drive a fairly big, old(ish) diesel Nissan X trail. I would welcome an affordable, reliable alternative to fossil fuels but what? Use bio fuel and people say under developed countries will starve as the price of plants used in the making of these will be more than food crops. Is it financially viable to pursue other routes like electric and hydrogen without the infrastructure in place?
How quickly can technology be released to the masses without breaking the bank?
There will be no cheap way to do this and it will piss people off whatever way they go.
 


PoG

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2013
1,117
Improve the infrastructure and make the EVs cheaper and people will make the switch. Simple really.
 






worthingseagull123

Well-known member
May 5, 2012
2,591
Yeah, I was just wondering whether it's been said more for the Green headline without it being fully thought through. It is always swings and roundabouts, From an overall resources perspective I'm not sure a sodding great SUV is necessarily environmentally better than a small petrol hybrid, even if it is all-electric.

Private diesel cars, yeah ban 'em tomorrow - along with all SUVs.

Still, it does concentrate everybody's minds so I'm not totally opposed. If it ends up as Johnson's worst-ever decision we'll be fine!

Yes comrade.

Can you not afford one?

Hence the bitterness?
 


Creaky

Well-known member
Mar 26, 2013
3,843
Hookwood - Nr Horley
Of course there will. Just in time for us to realise in 2035 we suddenly have a worldwide pollution problem with toxic, un-recyclable used batteries!

VW reckon that 97% of the materials in EV batteries are recyclable for the manufacture of new batteries. Mind you VW are hardly the Holy Bible when it comes to environmental statements.
 




happypig

Staring at the rude boys
May 23, 2009
7,974
Eastbourne
I drive a fairly big, old(ish) diesel Nissan X trail. I would welcome an affordable, reliable alternative to fossil fuels but what? Use bio fuel and people say under developed countries will starve as the price of plants used in the making of these will be more than food crops. Is it financially viable to pursue other routes like electric and hydrogen without the infrastructure in place?
How quickly can technology be released to the masses without breaking the bank?
There will be no cheap way to do this and it will piss people off whatever way they go.

Car have become very cheap to own and run in the last 40 years and virtually everyone who wants one has one; more than that they are seen as a right. The next couple of decades are going to see them go back to being a fairly expensive luxury and we are going to have to find other ways of getting about.
 




Notters

Well-known member
Oct 20, 2003
24,869
Guiseley
Ah ok. I'm pretty sure Air Quality has a direct impact on climate change though. So this policy is positive for both climate change and health reasons.

It usually has the opposite effect, e.g. diesels are better for air quality or worse for climate change. Equally we advise people they need to build a bypass to take traffic away from people's houses which leads to increased carbon emissions.
 


FatSuperman

Well-known member
Feb 25, 2016
2,830
Very much this - Government has a very poor track record of picking the right technology. We'll all pile into electric cars, only to be told 5 years later that we have ****ed the planet by mining all the lithium.

There is a lot of lithium out there, but it tends to only be found in relatively small amounts. Luckily, it’s highly recyclable, so secondary supply will be great. Fuel cell vehicles are probably a better option long term, but they are a fair way behind lithium in terms of large-scale deployable tech. As others have said, we absolutely must have this sort of target, or the relevant industries won’t do anything about it.

Battery tech in 15 years will be massively better than it is today.
 








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