• @[email protected]
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    614 days ago

    Electric vehicles

    • eliminate tailpipe emissions
    • cut brake dust emissions in half
    • pollute less as we transition to renewable energy
    • let us work toward elimination the huge polluting industries for gasoline refining and distribution
    • let us shrink the huge polluting industries of oil extraction and refining
    • are a huge step toward slowing the growth of climate change.

    While I completely agree transit, and walkable cities are much better, EVs are not nothing. More importantly, given the amount of time to build transit and walkable cities, EVs get us many of the advantages NOW

    • june (she/her)
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      21 day ago

      While those are great improvements over fossil fuel based cars, they also exasperate existing issues.

      Almost all of these EVs are in the SUV category. These vehicles take up more space on the road and parking lots. This results in less capacity for our road systems causing traffic engineers to incorrectly add more and more lanes to roads. Additionally combined with parking minimums, more and more land is developed into parking lots, which in term increases pollution and increases the heat island effect.

      The increased weight and instant torque both causes increased tire dust (as another commenter mentioned) as well as accelerated wear to the roads. The high power figures results in inattentive selfish drivers being able to reach high speeds quickly adding risk for pedestrians.

      I understand that the SUV craze existed before EVs were popular however as EVs are normalized it’ll only further enforce people buying oversized dangerous sub-4s 0-60 bricks.

    • @[email protected]
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      224 days ago

      Yeah, this comic is putting perfect in the way of good.

      Not to mention, there are people who do need vehicles, the trades being one example.

    • @[email protected]
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      74 days ago

      Also important to remember that not everywhere can be made walkable or makes sense to make public transit. You don’t want a bus route that picks up 2 people every day. That’s just worse than those 2 people having their own electric car.

      A lot of people in the world are living in rural places where public transit is worse for the environment and bikes aren’t a realistic way to get from a to b. In these places electric vehicles are the only better alternative.

      • @[email protected]
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        53 days ago

        Not as many people in the world as you think. By definition of remote parts of the world, very small amount of people actually live there.
        I lived in a remote part of the world in the village of barely 50 people. We had a small bus coming through it twice a day, and if you needed to go to the town, you just went there in the morning and returned in the evening in the bus. Some people had cars they were using once every couple of weeks, but most people didn’t. Bikes and walking was the most used form of transportation. Most of the people there were there for the sole reason of being far away and not needing to rush to the nearest city often, that’s kind of the whole thing.
        The shit you’re describing is mainly uniquely American problem, people living in bumfuck nowhere but commuting to town using their gasguzzler, not only it’s not universal, it’s actually very not normal.

        • @[email protected]
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          43 days ago

          My perspective is coming from Denmark. Around most of the country, a car is essential. Most of the country is farmland. People live on this farmland, and without a car, getting to work, buying groceries, getting to the doctor, is simply not feasible.

          I don’t own a car, because I live in a city, but I grew up somewhere, where you can’t live without a car.

          So why do people live out there? Because they’re farmers, construction workers and everything else an area with a lot of agriculture needs.

          • @[email protected]
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            110 hours ago

            Are you seriously using denmark as an example of car dependence?
            This is the extent of the danish rail network in 1930, there is no reason any part of denmark needs to be car dependent.

            • @[email protected]
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              10 hours ago

              Yes I am. I don’t expect people to ride a bike 10 km til at bus station in places where it’s simply not feasible to make bike lanes.

              Edit. Not to mention. You ride a bike 10 km to a bus, then take that bus for 20 minutes to a trainstation, then wait anything between 5 to 55 minutes for a train to show up, then ride that train for 1 hour to get to a big city, and then take another bus for 20 minutes to your job. No way am I spending 4+ hours in transport every day, if a car can do it in 1,5 hours.

              • @[email protected]
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                10 hours ago

                your country is the size of the netherlands and equally flat, what precisely is the reason they can do it and danes can’t?

                Also, 10km at e-bike speed (25 km/h) is not even half an hour, and if there aren’t tons of cars on the roads then you don’t need bike infrastructure beyond covered parking, so what’s the problem with biking that distance?

                • @[email protected]
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                  110 hours ago

                  But can the Netherlands do it? Do they only bike in the rural parts?

                  Sure, if people could just ride 10 km and then be at work, I see the point in it. But there are A LOT of places that are much further from the bigger cities where the actual jobs are. Out there you’d need to ride 10 km to even get to a bus, that may or may not come by once every hour. That bus can take you to a trainstation where a train will usually come by every hour. Then you can take that train to a bigger city where you can work, but that can easily be an hour. So at this point, if you time your initial bike trip to the bus right, you may already spend in excess of 2 hours, just to get to a large city where the jobs are. Now you need to take another bus to get to your actual job. Meaning 4+ hours round trip. It is not feasible for a person with family to do this.

                  Sure the person can just move to the city, where houses cost 5x more, and simple appartments cost half their paycheck.

      • @[email protected]
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        43 days ago

        Yes and no. The problem is too much of the world is unnecessarily built that way. This is one of the fundamental reasons why it will take so long to implement: we need to change where people prefer to live.

        Note I said “prefer” before y’all get up in arms about forcing people to move. We’ve spent way too many years giving rural people a lot of the same infrastructure as urban people and it’s just not sustainable. The thing is that even relatively small towns can have denser walkable areas and useful transit. Without forcing anyone to uproot, we ought to be able to get a good 80% or more of the population to not require a car.

        • @[email protected]
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          110 hours ago

          here in sweden more than 80% of the population already lives in an urban area, and contrary to what some people want to believe it’s perfectly fine.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 days ago

      let us work toward elimination the huge polluting industries for gasoline refining and distribution

      Unlikely. If we keep doubling-down on vehicle infrastructure, the remaining ICE vehicles will see greater vehicle-miles traveled (VMT). It’s not just the number of cars out there, it’s the number of cars multiplied by the distances that they travel.

      let us shrink the huge polluting industries of oil extraction and refining

      Unlikely. The industrial processes and materials used to produce EVs use copious quantities of petrochemicals.

      are a huge step toward slowing the growth of climate change.

      Unlikely. EVs still need the same infrastructure as ICE vehicles, and the chemical process of curing concrete alone is one of the major sources of CO2 emissions. As well, the ecological destruction wrought by automobile infrastructure is a significant contributor to climate change.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 days ago

        EVs still need the same infrastructure as ICE vehicles

        Hmmm, I haven’t taken mine to a gas station in two years. I must be way overdue.

        Now I know you’re moving the goalposts to roads when I was talking gasoline industry, but let me point out where I started

        While I completely agree transit, and walkable cities are much better, EVs are not nothing.

        More importantly I do live in a partly walkable town. I do use transit when I can. And yes I have the privilege of living in one of the few parts of the US where intercity rail is decent

        • @[email protected]
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          22 days ago

          Talking only about the gasoline industry when considering climate change is, at best, ineffective. What’s more, that’s exactly what the cartoon is calling out, i.e. touting the reduction in tailpipe emissions while ignoring all the myriad other ways that EVs are just like ICE vehicles. (Which includes large contributions to climate change.)

  • FundMECFS
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    204 days ago

    report from the Pew Charitable Trust found that 78 percent of ocean microplastics are from synthetic tire rubber. These toxic particles often end up ingested by marine animals, where they can cause neurological effects, behavioral changes, and abnormal growth.

    Meanwhile, British firm Emissions Analytics spent three years studying tires. The group found that a single car’s four tires collectively release 1 trillion “ultrafine” particles for every single kilometer (0.6 miles) driven. These particles, under 100 nanometers in size, are so tiny that they can pass directly through the lungs and into the blood. They can even cross the body’s blood-brain barrier. The Imperial College London has also studied the issue, noting that “There is emerging evidence that tire wear particles and other particulate matter may contribute to a range of negative health impacts including heart, lung, developmental, reproductive, and cancer outcomes.”

    Source

    • @[email protected]
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      3 days ago

      Stuff like this doesn’t shock me anymore. I just assume the worst case for everything and I’ve already accepted that we are fucked. I’m just hoping to die without pain.

  • @[email protected]
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    1554 days ago

    I hate this car-centric society, but let’s be real cars aren’t going anywhere. Moving away from fossil fuels is a good thing. Not sure why we’re criticizing progress here.

    • @[email protected]
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      It’s because on the modern internet, everyone is all-or-nothing when it comes to their chosen issue. Nuance has become unacceptable.

      This community in particular can get a little out of touch at times. In North America in particular, even if every level of government agreed to begin working towards a car free society immediately, we’d still be facing a decades long construction campaign as entire towns and cities would have to be restructured. In the meantime, a shift to electric vehicles is something that can drastically help the global warming issue, and can be implemented in less than a decade.

      In reality, we should be shifting to electric cars in the sort term, while we work towards eliminating the need for them in the long term.

      Also, I’m convinced that the brake dust/tire wear particulates talking point is the result of oil industry astroturfing. The brake dust thing especially is actually better on electric cars, since regenerative braking reduces the amount of brake wear.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 days ago

        Higher weight and higher torque means tires wear faster on EVs. That’s physics, and the theory is backed up by real world evidence.

        • @[email protected]
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          74 days ago

          If you were really concerned about higher vehicle weight, trucks are much worse so let’s start there

          • @[email protected]
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            Trucks are typically carrying tons of goods (except those awful LTL cases where the 50’ trailer is carrying one pallet)

            Cars (mostly SUVs these days) are usually just carrying 80kg of spongy meat.

            Those are not even the same levels of utility

            • @[email protected]
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              EVs are about 20% heavier than the equivalent gas powered car and offer the same utility.

              Full sized pickup trucks are 50-100% heavier than cars, are the most common vehicle in most of the US, and is “ usually just carrying 80kg of spongy meat.”. They are usually exactly the same levels of utility, plus don’t have any environmental benefits

        • @[email protected]
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          174 days ago

          The flatter torque curve (peak torque on electric cars is usually very comparable to ICE) is irrelevant, unless you are a shitty driver who treats the gas pedal like a two position switch.

        • @[email protected]
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          64 days ago

          Things can be both true and irrelevant. Astroturfing highlights irrelevant things to the point of relevance so they get in the way.

          Like Trump’s"feud" with Rosie O’Donnell. It exists, but means literally nothing and is just there to distract from actual conversation.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 days ago

          The average difference between EV and a gas car is around 300 to 400 kg. With an average weight of a small car being around 1500-1700 kg, and an electric variant of the same car being 1800-2000 kg, the difference is basically nothing. It’s, like, two large dudes. And that’s smaller car, the difference in big SUVs becomes almost negligible. It’s so nothing, especially compared to all the particles EVs don’t emit, the only reason we keep talking about is astroturfed bullshit from the conservative car manufacturers. It’s from the same playbook as wanting to get rid of wind turbines because sometimes they kill birds.

          • @[email protected]
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            33 days ago

            400kg makes a huge difference. Road damage increases proportional to the fourth power of axle load, which is like 2x in your example.

            • @[email protected]
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              13 days ago

              huge

              For the smallest car on the market it’s around 20%. It rapidly gets smaller the bigger the vehicle is. Exchanging lack of tailpipe emissions for less than 20% increase in road damage is nobrainer.

      • @[email protected]
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        23 days ago

        Uno reverse : I really dont think these are all or nothing criticisms. If anything, you’re engaging in that. Just because we criticize the proposed progress doesn’t mean we oppose it. You have no room for nuance in your criticism of our criticism!

    • Booboofinger
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      33 days ago

      My 2 favorite cities that is lived in were San Francisco and Rio de Janeiro. Apart from both of them being gorgeous and fun, one of the best things was that I did not need a car.

    • @[email protected]
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      344 days ago

      Its because EVs are being marketed as a green solution, not a stepping stone. If a car must exist it might as well be electric but we should be asking how do we reduce the cars that exist and their frequency of use. Building electrified transit and keeping ICE cars would as a whole be more beneficial than just converting all cars to EVs.

      • @[email protected]
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        214 days ago

        Building electrified transit and keeping ICE cars would as a whole be more beneficial than just converting all cars to EVs.

        This choice you’ve presented is extremely misleading. The build out of electrified public transportation and the shift from ICE to EV cars are not in any way related choices. If the government chooses to build more public transportation, that has no effect on whether or not EVs replace ICE cars.

        • @[email protected]
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          174 days ago

          The government building transit would effect the number of people who need to rely on a car.

          • @[email protected]
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            154 days ago

            Which is good, but still has nothing to do with what the remaining cars are powered by. There’s no reason why it has to be “transit+ICE” instead of “transit+EV”.

            • @[email protected]
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              124 days ago

              My point is that we should be making the most impactful changes we can to fight climate change and environmental destruction, which means subsidies, government investments, and tax breaks are better spent on transit, density, or active transport than on EV infrastructure/incentives

              • @[email protected]
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                64 days ago

                Even here in a walkable town with good transit, I still need a car so an EV is what I can do.

              • @[email protected]
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                134 days ago

                And the most impactful change I can make is purchasing an EV.

                Since I already vote for officials who support all of those issues there is no impactful change because the alignment is already there.

                There are locally impactful actions that I can participate in but none that will have the same impact as my personal choices.

                The most impactful choices I could make are all illegal. The majority of them being some form of demestic terrorism.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 days ago

        Building electrified transit and keeping ICE cars would as a whole be more beneficial than just converting all cars to EVs.

        I highly, highly doubt it. I lived in the country with pretty good transit, but exclusively ICE cars. It was not good, not at all. Better than cars only, still not good. Good transit doesn’t eliminate cars, unfortunately, and always breathing car emissions is bad, very, very, very bad.
        The only solution is to do both. Right now I live in the city with very good public transport, but still sprawling car infrastructure, the only difference is, there is a robust car emission rules, so most cars around are EVs or hybrids. It’s so, so, so much better than the first variation, it’s not even close.
        I would prefer city getting rid of most of the car-centric infrastructure still, but now I have a chance to see this day, and not die of a lung cancer at a ripe age of 55

    • Avid Amoeba
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      We’re not criticising progress. Moving away from ICE cars is a good thing. Moving away from cars when and where possible is an additional, better thing. This is [email protected] where people tend to look beyond moving from a worse car to a better car.

    • bountygiver [any]
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      54 days ago

      Yup, which is why the policies to ban the sale of new gas powered vehicle is a good thing.

    • @[email protected]
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      94 days ago

      Moving away from fossil fuels is a good thing.

      Yes, but not if it promotes destructive behaviours such as increased car dependency.

      EVs are like low-calorie sweeteners: they do nothing to stop obesity, and actually encourage more eating (and more obesity).

      • @[email protected]
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        44 days ago

        I’d argue that at least where I live, the amount of electric vehicles that has appeared over the precious decade is very clearly a majority bikes, scoots and other personal transport, instead of a car.

        But yes I know for this conversation you meant EV as in electric cars.

        And while the rent-a-scoots are pretty obnoxious at times, they do support the public transport insanely well in a city like mine, which has good bike paths and good public transport, but sometimes you’ll find yourself a few kilometres from the best connection or smth and take a scoot. (Although less so now, public transport just improved drastically last month, city started so many new cross-city routes, fking awesome for me.)

        • @[email protected]
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          23 days ago

          And while the rent-a-scoots are pretty obnoxious at times

          The only reason they’re “obnoxious” to you is the lack of bicycle infrastructure in your city. Well, that, and maybe your innate inability to cope with change. They cause almost zero problems if there is a good infra supporting it, which basically means ubiquitous bike lanes and bike parking.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 days ago

            The only reason they’re “obnoxious” to you is the lack of bicycle infrastructure in your city.

            Sorry, but that’s a hard miss. I live in Turku, Finland, and even by Finnish standards our bicycle infra is honestly pretty amazing.

            The reason their obnoxious has nothing to do with the scoots themselves, but the fact that you can’t really regulated users that well, or at least capitalist companies aren’t that motivated to regulate it too well, so you end up with teenagers riding 3 people to a scooter, while drunk. And “drunk” here is the way Finnish people get drunk.

            Installing breathalysers wouldn’t be cost effective because they’re somewhat expensive and all the on-board gear breaks all the time.

            They do have a reaction test at night, which I’ve found a good extra. Definitely couldn’t do it blitzed out of your mind but after a few, yeah, easy. Then they also limit speeds to 16km/h at night which is pretty annoying when you’re not actually drunk yourself and just want to get from one place to another.

            But the worst things the kids do is is be extremely disrespectful while driving them and then — despite the purpose made parking places for them not 10 meters away — they crash their scoots like this at the front door of a supermarket:

            I saw that. Politely told the gang of three who’d arrived on it that “that’s not the proper place for it”. They started whining like teenagers do, taking it as some threat to their masculinity. Started telling me they’re gonna beat me. Yeah, right pencilnecks in front of security cams, bring on the slaps and then your daddies money after the court case, although the damages in Finland are much more moderate to like American cases. Also I think I honestly could’ve taken them, but I don’t want a conviction for beating up teenagers.

            (So I just took a photo reported in the app and they “warned him”)

            I’m a third generation taxi driver who chooses not to have a car, who utilises all public transport, especially those scoots, buses and my own ebike and literally the most exciting thing that’s happened to me this year has been the opening of the new bus lines in my city. Our public transport was on some scale the best in Europe btw. I think it was the performance of the route guide,accuracy, and live bus locations on map you can check on your phone etc. Oh and not just once. Five times. Consecutive. https://www.foli.fi/en/news/föli-was-the-best-in-the-european-best-survey-for-the-fifth-time

            I fucking love change man. Honestly starved for it.

            What I don’t like is kids being obnoxious with the new tech to the point that the tech is in danger of getting a bad image because of that, specifically.

            So then the obnoxious nature of some hormonal douches (not all teens are irresponsible assholes and some non-teens are definitely still assholes but you know, generalising here) will slow down change.

            Which I wouldn’t like.

        • @[email protected]
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          44 days ago

          I’d argue that at least where I live, the amount of electric vehicles that has appeared over the precious decade is very clearly a majority bikes, scoots and other personal transport, instead of a car.

          Me too, and I love it! Just the number of private e-scooters out this year has blown my mind! I’m not sure if it’s due to accessibility (they are <$1000) or if our rental e-scooter program showed people the value in micromobility, so they invested in a personal e-device.

          And while the rent-a-scoots are pretty obnoxious at times, they do support the public transport insanely well in a city like mine

          My city does not have great public transportation, however, the data from our first year of rental e-scooters has shown that people are using them for trips that would be “car first” at any given time. This is positive, and that’s with an enormous amount of push-back, lacklustre infrastructure, and the growing-pains that come from such a new and highly regulated form of transportation.

          • @[email protected]
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            14 days ago

            people are using them for trips that would be “car first” at any given time

            When my personal EV has been broken or I’ve not come from home or something, I used to used them to go to some large shops relatively nearby, but now I have a direct bus connection, which is faster and more pleasant in the winter.

            This is positive, and that’s with an enormous amount of push-back, lacklustre infrastructure, and the growing-pains that come from such a new and highly regulated form of transportation.

            Very true. They’re definitely here to stay. I’m just waiting on the day that they’ll progress to cars, with hopefully reasonable pricing. (Fucking capitalism ruining everything in the long run.) Some small electric cars, I’d just like to be able to lug a bit of stuff and perhaps have protection from the weather. Be able to drive to places a bit further away that buses don’t go to.

            Although they would need breathalyser locks I think, but that’s not a massive added cost compared to the car.

      • @[email protected]
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        64 days ago

        You want electric buses? You want battery electric trains? Electric airplanes?

        Cars are your path to research and development for these modes of transportation.

        • @[email protected]
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          74 days ago

          I wish that happened. It’s very difficult to convince an EV owner to take a train or bus, even if they are electric.

          The more convenient we make driving in cars, and the better drivers “feel” about driving an EV, the more difficult it is to move away from car dependency.

          Here’s a survey from CAA (Insurance company in Canada, like AAA in the States):

          Drivers were more likely to drive more in a battery-powered EV than even a Hybrid.

          And this part kills me: “The majority of trips for both BEV and PHEV drivers are relatively short, typically staying within 10 kilometers of home. This pattern reflects the convenience of electric driving for routine commutes and local errands.”

          UCDavis Institute of Transportation Studies also found that EVs are driven more than gas cars (SOURCE).

          • @[email protected]
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            The majority of trips for both BEV and PHEV drivers are relatively short, typically staying within 10 kilometers of home.

            As a side note, I’m especially annoyed that every BEV “needs” a 300 mile range when 50 miles would be more than enough for the average American (assuming they can charge at home). Those additional batteries make the vehicles larger, heavier, and more expensive, and the batteries could be better used elsewhere.

            But still, electric cars were a gateway to electric bikes and scooters.

            • Avid Amoeba
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              The 300-mile-range req is just ridiculous. However it’s easier to pad the margin on a 60K vehicle by adding this or that for another 5-10K. It’s harder to do that on cheap vehicles and they can’t sell a 100-mile-range EV for a lot of money. Am working in automotive and emphasizing big expensive models is key for creating shareholder value.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 days ago

            10 km is pretty far. Walking 1km isn’t bad, but 3 is a decent chunk of time and energy. 10 is a pain in the ass by bus and a relatively quick trip by light rail assuming you didn’t have to walk that far to the station.

            Like, I’m not contesting that a lot of drivers should walk for errands more, or that evs encourage car focusing, but that metric fails to account for the fact that few people will walk 2 hours one way for an errand.

            • @[email protected]
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              34 days ago

              10 km is pretty far.

              That’s “up to 10km”, not that every trip is 10km.

              In that context, it’s going to be easier/faster to bike or take an e-scooter to your destination.

              If it’s under 2km, then walking really shouldn’t be a problem.

              And if public transportation is available for medium distance trips, that should be first (as it is in cities/countries that are not built around car-dependency).

              but that metric fails to account for the fact that few people will walk 2 hours one way for an errand.

              Look at the bigger picture. We should be walking a minimum 10,000 steps a day (something like 8,000 to 12,000, realistically). That’s 8km a day as a bare minimum for minimum basic health.

              Driving costs more time, because you now have to allocate time to drive + time to get those steps in. Why not walk that 2km errand instead?

              At those short distances, we aren’t talking about massive differences in time to destination. And I think anyone can use the mental health benefits of movement, too.

        • Avid Amoeba
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          Not sure if you’re aware but we’ve had electric buses and trains for well over half a century. We don’t need them to carry long range batteries. We have them in Europe and even in some places in North America. Batteries haven’t been needed for electrifying public transit for a very long time. In fact some of the first public transit was electric. Some places just choose the cheapest upfront option instead of spending a bit more on infrastructure in order to realize environmental and efficiency benefits.

          As for planes, yes probably. Although I’m not sure whether there’s a viable route to electric planes that goes through batteries or whether that use case would necessitate synthetic fuel.

          • @[email protected]
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            111 hours ago

            even without external electricity you don’t need batteries, there were perfectly functional buses in the 60’s that used flywheels to store energy. And i believe technology has advanced ever so slightly in the 60 years since then…

      • @[email protected]
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        Yes, but not

        Yes, but yes actually. It’s not how the question exists in the world, it’s not and it’s never “more car-centrism with EV or less car-centrism with FFV”. It’s usually two related but very separate questions and you need to fight for right answers for both.

        low-calorie sweeteners

        Also, not how that works.

    • drkt
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      Because it’s progress that needed to happen 30 years ago. While we’ve been transitioning to electric cars, progress also needed to happen on every other issue but it doesn’t happen because we’re all in on electric cars instead of doing something about car dependency as a whole. It’s not moving forward, it’s moving sideways.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 days ago

        Speaking from the US, we’re clearly not yet all in on EVs and we just killed funding for transit and intercity rail. And they’re trying to remove fuel efficiency standards altogether. We are 30 years ago and regressing fast.

        Transit and intercity rail are receding into some future utopian fever dream but some of us can still choose EVs

    • @[email protected]
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      Cars will always have their place. However, that place doesn’t need to be “everywhere”.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 days ago

      Moving away from fossil fuels is a good thing.

      That depends on where the electricity comes from. Instead of ‘EV’ we should really be calling these things Natural Gas cars.

  • @[email protected]
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    374 days ago

    Car culture evangelist in fuckcars community missing the point as always.

    The point is that EVs are not a good solution to the problem with cars - they are just a better car. This individualizes what is a collective problem.

    My city is adding six new lanes for cars in the coming years, meanwhile there are already intersections that a person has to jog to get across in time. Cars have their use, but it’s far far far less than people realise.

    Valorizing EVs leads to perpetuating car centric designs, which is a negative across many dimensions - not only ecologically.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 days ago

      All that being said, better car is still better than a worse car. I live near a big road, and it kinda sucks. Back then when all cars were emitting poison from a tailpipe instead of only some doing it, it didn’t just suck, it was a fucking nightmarish hell, dirty, loud, smelly, poisonous dark hell, and some people from my family died prematurely because of that.
      I don’t think the community in my city can persuade carbrains to quit caring any time soon. They can convince them to start with being slightly less damaging, for starters.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 hours ago

        it’s also important to remember that electric cars are heavier (you know, batteries) which increases road wear, tyre wear, and makes them more dangerous in collisions (and means they need yet more battery to push the extra weight, very fun).

        Electric cars are really only strictly better if they’re also made smaller and lighter, electric cars are great but we should be treating 2-seaters with like 200km range as the norm.

      • @[email protected]
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        63 days ago

        Yes, a better car is a better car. That’s perfectly reasonable harm reduction logic.

        I just would rather people not forget that that’s all it is, and know that there are much better communal solutions. Even if they seem utopian, they’re actually very sensible and pragmatic.

        Materially speaking, we could start building a better world tomorrow morning. We don’t have to wait for tech to save us.

  • Maestro
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    304 days ago

    Electric cars also reduce particulate dust. Because of regenerative braking they need to brake less often and less agressive. There was a study published just kadt week.

    • rainwall
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      214 days ago

      Also noise pollution. Under 35 mph, most car noise is engine noise.

      • @[email protected]
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        110 hours ago

        eeeh, i don’t think this is a particularly noticable benefit.
        The amount of noise given off by cars at those speeds is just an annoyance, the real problem is the tyre noise at high speeds and that’s only made worse by electric cars.
        They recently lowered the speed on a through-road near me from 70km/h to 60km/h and it made a pretty huge difference in how tolerable it is to be anywhere near the road, the difference between a combustion and an electric car driving on a residential street is so much smaller that it’s not even funny.

      • Maestro
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        54 days ago

        Yes, but it seems from the study that the increase in tire dust is smaller than the refuction in brake dust

        • @[email protected]
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          54 days ago

          Brakes are iron and copper, the latter is an environmental contaminant. But tires pollute zinc and a hundred other petrochemicals. One is causing big problems with fish - 6PPD, but there are likely others causing yet unseen damage. Between the two brake dust seems more manageable in stormwater.

      • @[email protected]
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        84 days ago

        Im curious if the additional weight of EVs causes more tire wear and ends up negating any savings from the brake dust. We also have to consider manufacturing and disposal of both vehicles to be truly fair.

        • Atelopus-zeteki
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          54 days ago

          The additional weight, yes, as posted by @avidamoeba. Tho’ those are different things, apples to oranges - brake dust and tire dust are not the same. With the power that some EVs have it’s really easy to accelerate rapidly leading to faster tire wear. That is a choice made by the driver. I put my EV in eco mode, and gently accelerate. And try to ride my bike as much as possible, instead of my car. On the bike, I often try to accelerate as fast as possible, for cardiovascular and other health reasons, including just plain having fun!

        • Avid Amoeba
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          That and the increased road wear which grows exponentially (with the fourth power of axle weight) with the weight of the vehicle. That means a 2 ton car does 16 times more road damage than a 1 ton car. And before someone takes this to mean I prefer to not have EVs on the road, NO, I mean that this is a fact and we have to deal with it somehow while eliminating ICE. For example by making lower range EVs more attractive, since they already are acceptable in practice for a large proportion of road users. Going from ICE cars to ICE trucks, a common trend, is even worse in this regard since it adds significant emissions on top.

        • Atelopus-zeteki
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          44 days ago

          Yay! Thank you! Adding it to the archive. I keep my car in the level 3 regeneration, so mostly “coast” up to the stop. I’m glad to see such significant reduction. Also because I breath a lot of that dust when I’m cycling, less particulates = better.

          Edit: Some key findings from the paper:

          Key finding #3.8: As the level of electrification of a vehicle rises, the dependence on regenerative braking also increases, thus lowering PM emissions from brake wear. Based on recent evidence [30], regenerative braking can reduce, in the worst- case scenario (i.e. highest usage of mechanical brakes or equivalently lowest usage of regenerative braking), brake wear emissions by 10-48% for hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs), 66% for plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), and 83% for battery electric vehicles (BEVs)

          Key finding #3.13: Vehicle weight is directly proportional to tyre wear emissions. For example, a car with a 20% higher mass demonstrated a 20% increase in tyre wear [13]. Electric cars are around 20% heavier than the equivalent conventional cars, so they emit around 20% more tyre wear [40], [42], [43].

    • @[email protected]
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      63 days ago

      Get an electric car if you want, but you should still support society moving away from needing them in the first place, no?

      Imagine a school cafeteria is serving kids the option of 5 hershey’s chocolate bars, or a slice of pizza. You can acknowledge the pizza is better, but you should still be asking where the god damn vegetables are.

      • @[email protected]
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        That’s pretty much exactly the point I was trying to make. Incremental improvements are better than no improvements.

        People shit on electric cars because they aren’t the perfect solution, ignoring the fact that they are better than what we have now.

        It took us 150 years to get in to this mess. We aren’t going to fix it completely overnight.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 days ago

        How many people living on their rural property build their own roads to get there, as compared to relying on taxpayer subsidies?

        • @[email protected]
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          12 days ago

          Running a grader over their many-kilometer unsealed dirt road once a year after the wet season is how a lot of rural places do it.

          If it’s roads on/within their own property they do have to pay for it (I cannot speak globally, but in Australia). If it’s on government land then of course it’s govt cost and responsibility.

          Trains are great for high density. They don’t make sense to small towns or widely-dispersed populations - electric vehicles will always be needed and it’s dumb to pretend one size fits all.

  • @[email protected]
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    404 days ago

    Ah, well if an improvement isn’t perfect, we should definitely reject it and continue using the worst possible version until a perfect one is created

  • @[email protected]
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    4 days ago

    Arent roads useful for more things than cars? Biking on a road that is filled with small rocks is not fun

    Streets can also allow kids play if there arent cars on them

    • @[email protected]
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      210 hours ago

      roads designed for cars are massively larger than roads that aren’t made for cars, a standard modern car-centric road would be a pretty major and significant thing for most of human history.

      A single standard car lane is a generously wide bike path.

    • @[email protected]
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      63 days ago

      A road is more than a smooth, flat surface. A road that’s designed for cars has to have an extensive roadbed of gravel and soil laid down, as well as a thick base of pavement on which to lay the surface, because of the weight of vehicles. A bike path, or a street where children can play, is comparatively speaking just some asphalt.

    • @[email protected]
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      54 days ago

      Definitely don’t need streets to play. A couple paved areas for basketball, skating, etc is nice - but that’s just a park.

    • 🍉 Albert 🍉
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      54 days ago

      ish, but without cars you don’t need a 20 lane highway. and streets can also less lanes,

    • FundMECFS
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      44 days ago

      Yeah. They are actually furthering the point by imagining there is no solution apart from EVs and ICE cars. Also, have they seen the name of the conmunity lol!

  • Lexi Sneptaur
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    554 days ago

    This, to me, just seems like it’s trying to give permissions to ICE car owners not to change anything.

    • @[email protected]
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      134 days ago

      This, to me, shows cars are more damaging than what just comes out of their tail pipes. Maybe the illustration could have included impacts of cycling and transit to help illustrate the point it is trying to make by comparing the impacts.

      • Lexi Sneptaur
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        84 days ago

        I think that would have made a huge difference… just showcase how literally none of these concerns are relevant with a bicycle.

        • @[email protected]
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          54 days ago

          Well technically some parking space and asphalt might be needed. And the odd snail or small snake may get hit by bicycles, and tires still shed particles off of bikes, but the scale is vastly different in comparison to cars.

          • Lexi Sneptaur
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            31 day ago

            Yeah I suppose that’s the point. There is no world without cars entirely, but we can certainly deprioritize them drastically

            • @[email protected]
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              110 hours ago

              there’s no world without cars, but there’s also no world without tractors, and i have literally never seen anyone give even the slightest shit about tractors aside from when they’re stuck behind one on the road, which is kind of hilarious because even then the problem is cars as any smaller vehicle could just pass the tractor.

    • @[email protected]
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      194 days ago

      It definitely is not that. However, it is a reminder that, even with electric vehicles, there is a serious, environmental and social impact.

    • Avid Amoeba
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      54 days ago

      They don’t need permission. They won’t change anything unless their material conditions make it likely for them to change. That is lower EV prices, lower maintenance, better utility, good public transit, etc. They would buy a RAM 1500 if they wanted to whether they saw this meme or not. It’s unlikely that someone was sitting thinking whether to go with an EV or ICE, sees this meme and goes like - nah fuck that, I’m getting a gas guzzler. Meanwhile the ones that are active in the spaces that advocate for car alternatives had a bit of fun reading it, and got a small boost in motivation to keep pestering our politicians to expand transit.

      • Lexi Sneptaur
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        34 days ago

        I’m not sure if I’m convinced on the efficacy of a post like this to boost political motivation, but I am glad it was fun at least

  • @[email protected]
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    114 days ago

    This cartoon is almost easy to mistake for satire making fun of the anti-car people.

    Y’all have to face the reality that cars are not going away. The roads will outlast every human being that reads these words. People will continue to travel on those roads in vehicles of some kind. EVs are the best option we have yet for making the roads’ usage have less environmental impact.

    • @[email protected]
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      114 days ago

      You do realize those roads are only driveable because of extensive maintaince. If we stopped maintaining a specific road and built tracks instead, many people would choose the tram/train as the road would be too rough to travel at any decent speed after a few years. The infrastructure we build and maintain directly impact the mode people use. And currently many places exclussively build and maintain roads, often not even including the option of a sidewalk.

      • @[email protected]
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        64 days ago

        Yeah that’s pretty funny because I’ve driven on unmaintained roads for decades. In my area we are lucky if they do any maintenance when there are road problems. Sometimes people have to clear trees from the road after storms, and it may be done by the county or a random guy with a chainsaw.

        Also I learned to drive on gravel roads, drifting around corners to learn the innate balance of maintaining stability without traction. Even if the paved roads were ground down to gravel, we would still drive on them.

  • @[email protected]
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    54 days ago

    Good luck AmeriKa, you are way behind the 1st World and the fucking MAGAts will make it worse.

  • @[email protected]
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    4 days ago

    Had the right idea but lost me at the end. Better is better. We can both electrify and work to move away from automobiles at the same time. We should not divide a group of people with common interest in a better tomorrow. To do so is how we lose.

  • Tony Bark
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    124 days ago

    On one hand, I like that EVs are leaps and bounds above gas guzzlers. On the other, it does still reinforce our current car culture.

    • @[email protected]
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      210 hours ago

      EVs would be an objective improvement if people actually bought small sensible ones, but of course that would entail actually changing their lifestyle and thus it cannot happen.

      The only good car is a kei car.

  • @[email protected]
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    74 days ago

    Now do the same for trains.

    Or do you think they don’t kill animals / require resources?

    Maybe perfect is the enemy of good?

      • @[email protected]
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        34 days ago

        Even if we did want to humor them. 1 or 2 train tracks to cross is much easier for an animal than a 6 lane road of mixed traffic. Trains are all chained together so rails see a train every 5-15 minutes at most whereas a road could see hundreds of cars all spaced apart and going different speeds in that same time frame. Trains will still hit some animals, but it far less per person/good moved per mile of travel than a car.

        As for their resources argument yes they still use resources, but it is less resources spent overall so still a better option.