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Do people realize the fuel for EVs is Petroleum?

Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:00 am
Posted by Saunson69
Stephen the Pirate
Member since May 2023
8230 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:00 am
Petroleum fuels both oil and natural gas powered cars. EVs are powered through batteries which power from electricity which comes from turbines that power from Nat Gas. Some of the electricity may be from wind, solar, nuclear, hydro, but it is likely coming from natural gas.

I think vast majority of people get so caught up on thinking it's tree hugging when the sources of power for EVs is natural gas which is petroleum.

The difference is emissions. Gasoline in your car is sourced from a refinery which releases a lot of CO2. Then the refined oil goes to gas stations which ends up in your car which releases more emissions through combustion in your engine.

Natural gas turbines do have a good amount of emissions but not as much as refineries. Then when the electricity powers your battery, and your car runs on battery, there are no emissions.

Overall less CO2 emission in the battery process. I personally feel if EVs were the exact same price as gasoline powered cars, and there were many, many more charging stations, then I wouldn't mind getting one. I drive maybe 2-3, 4 hour trips a year, so range isn't as big of a deal to me. And yes I am conservative. I do not have land. I do not go mudding. I'm never in a situation where I would need anything but standard interstate/hwy/streets. I have no idea how an EV would fare if it were stuck in a muddy field if it'd do any better than 2 wheel drive.
This post was edited on 9/2/24 at 7:09 am
Posted by WillieD
Lafayette/BR
Member since Apr 2014
2983 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:01 am to
Really? No that’s never been discussed on here before
Posted by Thracken13
Aft Cargo Hold of Serenity
Member since Feb 2010
18530 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:02 am to
Well shite my mind is blown.......i never considered that
Posted by GusMcRae
Deep in the heart of the Big Sleazy
Member since Oct 2008
3707 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:03 am to
No
Posted by Saunson69
Stephen the Pirate
Member since May 2023
8230 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:04 am to
The way people react here I believe 95% do not think about this at all when they get heated. They may know, but when heated do not consciously think at all about this.
This post was edited on 9/2/24 at 7:06 am
Posted by MintBerry Crunch
Member since Nov 2010
5782 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:15 am to
Efficiency is better with EVs.

Power plants are better at turning gas into energy than cars are. Same amount of fuel at the power plant powers more EVs than the same amount in a gas engine.
Posted by jimmy the leg
Member since Aug 2007
41843 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:26 am to
quote:

Overall less CO2 emission


We need more, not less.
Posted by Azkiger
Member since Nov 2016
26893 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:30 am to
quote:

Efficiency is better with EVs.

Power plants are better at turning gas into energy than cars are. Same amount of fuel at the power plant powers more EVs than the same amount in a gas engine.


Not when it comes to production.

It takes more power to gather materials and manufacture an EV than an ICE vehicles, especially considering the battery replacement every 5ish years.
Posted by N2cars
Close by
Member since Feb 2008
37873 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:34 am to
I'm not an EV fan, but this isn't true:

quote:

every 5ish years


Looks like they hold efficency better than was projected, which is good for the buyers since EVs depreciate terribly.
Posted by Ricardo
Member since Sep 2016
6169 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:40 am to
Also there is significant loss over transmission lines and the electricity stored in batteries is already beginning the loss in efficiency.
Posted by Azkiger
Member since Nov 2016
26893 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:41 am to
quote:

I'm not an EV fan, but this isn't true:


I'd go off battery warranty.

Ford, for example, only backs their batteries for 100k miles.

15k miles a year (average mileage for Americans) = 6.6 years.

Ford's not confident past that point for a rreason.
Posted by Rust Cohle
Baton rouge
Member since Mar 2014
2140 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:42 am to
It’s more like 8-12 years, batteries are 90% Recyclable, and Technology for EV has much room to grow. Samsung will start producing a solid-state battery in 27 with a range of 600 miles and a charge time of nine minutes.

The warranty at 8 years is for 70% loss capacity. The Ford lightning F150 with a range of 320 miles at 8 years would be replaced if you’re only ranging 225 miles.
This post was edited on 9/2/24 at 7:49 am
Posted by MintBerry Crunch
Member since Nov 2010
5782 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:47 am to
quote:

especially considering the battery replacement every 5ish years.


“Electric vehicle (EV) batteries typically last 10 to 20 years, and are not typically replaced every five years”
Posted by LSU4lyfe
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2003
7989 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:48 am to
Studies have shown that it takes a Toyota Camry 88,000 miles of emissions to equal the emissions out of by just making car batteries.
Posted by kywildcatfanone
Wildcat Country!
Member since Oct 2012
135563 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:50 am to
This is a new topic for sure
Posted by aTmTexas Dillo
East Texas Lake
Member since Sep 2018
22306 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:50 am to
I have an EV. I know from my electricity bill where my energy comes from.
Posted by Azkiger
Member since Nov 2016
26893 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:58 am to
quote:

Electric vehicle (EV) batteries typically last 10 to 20 years


Without knowing anything else beyond the claim, you don’t find it suspicious that you're seeing 10-20 year projections on such new technology?

I doubt the EVs sold in 2004-2014 have that sort of lifespan.

You can guess a 2022 EV's batteries would last that long, but you don't know.

Edit: Also, typically is a weasel word. I typically see normal BMI patients come through my door. Doesn't mean ~75% of Americans aren't overweight/obese.

I'm sure there are a few city slickers who drop 5k miles on their EVs each year. That's not the average, though.
This post was edited on 9/2/24 at 8:02 am
Posted by Rust Cohle
Baton rouge
Member since Mar 2014
2140 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 7:59 am to
Creating 100 kW battery creates 5 to 15 tons of CO2.

1 gallon of gasoline burned produces about 19.6 pounds of CO2.

A Corolla creates .33 tons of CO2 per thousand miles. At 80,000 miles, it would produce 25 tons of CO2.

Posted by MintBerry Crunch
Member since Nov 2010
5782 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 8:12 am to
quote:

I doubt the EVs sold in 2004-2014 have that sort of lifespan.


Are we in 04-14 right now?
Posted by Azkiger
Member since Nov 2016
26893 posts
Posted on 9/2/24 at 8:14 am to
quote:

Are we in 04-14 right now?


Why did you ignore the point of that post?
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