Just_a_fan wrote: ↑03 Feb 2020, 14:38
henry wrote: ↑03 Feb 2020, 14:14
Depending on Energy source an electric car will potentially reduce the average U.K. driver’s output at most by a couple of tonnes per year. That still leaves a long way to go.
Interestingly, the UK is actually a "good guy" in the reducing CO2 emissions game. We've almost halved our emissions (on a per capita basis) between 1980 and 2018 from 10.3t to 5.6t. France is similar (9.1t to 5.0t). Interestingly, Germany (which is held up as a "good guy" by some green types) has done rather badly, still being at 9.0t per capita in 2018.
China has gone from 1.5t in 1980 to 8t in in 2018. The US has made improvements (down from 20.8t to 16.1t) but is still a big emitter per capita. Australia has increased.
...
It's tough one to sort out. I think it will require an international disaster to knock heads together. How many will suffer in the course of that? Too many.
The U.K. has changed a lot partly by reducing manufacturing and its CO2 cost, its also reduced coal use and increased wind and solar. The US has likewise reduced manufacturing. Some of the reduced manufacturing around the world has arrived in China and accounts for some of its increase, China’s reliance on Coal has exacerbated that.
1 tonne may be delusional in a practical sense but that doesn’t mean it’s not where we need to arrive, every year we defer is another year the climate is more affected and the oceans increase in acidity, the major effects, changes that will stay in place for generations to come.
As for “worked hard to achieve”, there are plenty of folk in low consumption sub Saharan Africa working just as hard. The only difference is their choice of parents.
But you’re right. International disaster is probably what it will take and whilst many of the haves will suffer the have nots will likely suffer more, and that will likely be within economies as well as between them.
Looking at the article @J.A.W. posted about the scale of electric vehicle consumption in the US the numbers are frightening. To even get US vehicle emissions to 1 tonne/vehicle/annum would require both a massive change in generation mix and a change in vehicle type. The analysis in the article is flawed in that it assumes a per vehicle electricity rate of consumption on a small passenger vehicle, sedan, when they account for only about a third of the miles covered, 1.25 trillion out of 3.25 trillion. The rest is in trucks and heavy goods vehicles. My guess is that even if it were possible to electrify the whole fleet the electricity demands would be 3 times higher.
As you have said there will need to be some changes in life style and behaviour and those changes will be quite large.
Fortune favours the prepared; she has no favourites and takes no sides.
Truth is confirmed by inspection and delay; falsehood by haste and uncertainty : Tacitus