Ferry wrote: ↑06 Oct 2021, 22:18
I'm doing both! Heat pump up on my wall,
two BEVs outside, 98% renewable in the socket. At the same time exporting to Denmark, Germany, Netherlands, UK.
Do you miss the last time you had a petrol hot hatch (or sportscar) with an internal combustion engine and manual transmission? I don't feel ready to give it up yet, it's so much fun snicking through the gears, stabbing the throttle to an instant bellow from the exhaust (no turbos here!) and rev matching downshifts on every single drive.
Yet it's necessary for ICEs to be gone I suppose.
Here in Australia, if you go for a drive you'll be lucky to count 1 BEV out of 200 cars you see on the road.
For now, you don't feel socially unacceptable when driving an ICE as nearly everyone else still is (for now). With very low fuel excise and no annual CO2 road tax in Australia, it's little wonder perhaps?
The policies in Ireland (for instance) seem far more effective at getting people to get rid of their polluting car (e.g., hot hatchback) that is expensive to tax and fuel, and get a diesel, hybrid, PHEV or EV instead.
Of course even in Australia this will change (presumably?), and petrol will become increasingly unavailable as demand reduces, just as LPG (liquid petroleum gas) is already more difficult to find due to reduced demand.
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑06 Oct 2021, 22:03
The point is that politics prevents the problem being solved, not the available technology. We could run the entire planet on renewables within 20 years using today's technology if we wanted to. But politics prevents it.
mzso wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 00:45
More like people not willing to sacrifice their standard of living. Which would be rather uncomfortable for the majority of people.
True on both counts. The Prime Minister of Australia even said directly he had "no intention to tax the weekend", i.e., no taxes or bans on large dual-cab ICE utilities (pickup trucks) which are then used to bring out your motorboat, jetskis or dirt trail bikes and the like for polluting ICE-based recreation on weekends. All these high emitting, unnecessary activities are things which a progression taxation regime would tax heavily and discourage.
In itself, environmental policies mean you
would not run a Formula One grand prix. Transporting tonnes of cargo by polluting air and ship would be and is totally unacceptable. Furthermore, some attendees are not travelling by public transport but rather by plane or ICE which is unacceptable. Power on site at the Melbourne Grand Prix is often coming from diesel ICE generators -- again totally acceptable. So recreation is bad for the environment and is just plain unacceptable, be it the Australian Grand Prix, Australian Open, Olympics (even worse!) -- these lavish events are totally environmentally untenable.
The key to reducing environmental impact, as mzso says, is to slash living standards to the absolute minimum. Formula One, where hundreds of millions of Euros are wasted on making a car slightly faster than somebody else's substantially similar car, being abolished is perhaps a very important part of sending the right message of tackling environmental issues?
To think vehicles like BMW X7, Rolls Royce Cullinan and Cadillac Escalade, that are both much larger than necessary and emit huge amounts of CO2 from their enormous engines, are built and encouraged (by the capitalist system of greed is good...?)... They are environmentally unnecessary aren't they?
I guess Denmark (and the like) have the right idea: all you can do is tax vulgar behemoths by 200-300% to mould the free market to the more sustainable model you wish it to take.
mzso wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 00:45
Which would be rather uncomfortable for the majority of people.
Actually the majority of people in the world are quite poor, are they not?
It's just the matter of reducing the living standards of outliers in ridiculously rich Westernised countries -- so just a matter of needing a world parliament with the initiative to equalise living standards perhaps and get rid of the arbitrary countries as John Lennon sang?
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 14:16
Again, bombs are only necessary because of political differences. They aren't inherently necessary.
Certainly! Without arbitrary country divisions, bombs and military would be unnecessary, again as the Beatle sang in a pop song.
This would seem easier said than done, and also constitutes extreme left wing politics, which around half (going by typical results, and probably more when including those who vote for moderate centre-left parties) of the voting population are uncomfortable with and unwilling to vote for.
I guess the European Parliament should be applauded for daring to fix the problem of polluting ICEs in a relatively timely manner, even though it could easier be (and is) kicked down the road to future decades by other parliaments?
Getting politicians to fix something that will be a problem in 50, 100 or 1000 years is quite the miracle really! As the Australian Prime Minister shows, many other politicians and voters could not care less about a problem that far out (even if there are extreme weather events, droughts and bushfires from climate change happening now).