| Study: Electric Cars Produce 30 Percent More Emissions Than Ethanol Cars | |
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These claims assume that 100% of the electricity for the EV comes from coal-fired power plants and that a comparable car would get 35 mpg—both of which seem like unrealistic assumptions. So I dug around the internet today to try and come up with more realistic numbers. I have a lot of respect for Biofuels Digest, and I really hope they don’t take this post the wrong way. I imagine that the study was prompted by several issues, including the fact that public opinion has been steadily shifting to adopt a future filled with electric cars instead of biofuels and the impression within the biofuels industry that biofuels are being shut out of the lion’s share of stimulus funding due to a shift in political opinion from an increasingly EV-hungry public. Certainly the recent half-billion dollar stimulus loans to Tesla and Fisker did nothing to assuage the biofuel industry’s anxiousness. Problems With the Study The future of electric cars is not based on the Tesla Roadster, it is based on sedans that seat 4-5 people. When comparing cars you need to compare apples to apples. Comparing a hypothetical 35 mpg car to an electric car doesn’t seem logical. That 35 mpg car would be a Toyota Yaris or Chevy Aveo. If you want to compare an electric car to a fuel-powered car, compare that EV to a 27 mpg 4 door gasoline sedan (and I’m being generous on mpg there). CAFE standards are fleet-wide standards. It’s not that every car in the US will get 35 mpg when CAFE takes full effect. Electric Cars Actually Produce 40% Fewer Emissions Than E85 Powered Cars Even so, I’ve always felt that for our country’s security and for the benefit of the environment, it is important to have as diverse an energy/transportation portfolio as possible. There are many reasons to have both electric cars and biofuels. Both improve on the environmental impacts of living and both fulfill different needs. Personally I think electric cars make a lot of sense and they will eventually win out over combustion engines naturally, but it will take some time. In the meantime we need biofuels to increase our energy security and lower the environmental impact of our current fleet. Source: GO Media - Written by Nick Chambers
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An analysis done by Biofuels Digest has come to the very surprising conclusion that an electric car will produce 30% more carbon dioxide emissions over its lifetime than a car powered by E85 corn ethanol. Not only that, the study also found that the same electric car will produce 21% more carbon dioxide than even a gasoline powered car.
