Yes - the reliability is proven. EVs with less moving parts are far more reliable.I am in the market for a used car . 2-3 years old . Budget around 28k. I still believe diesel is the best way to go . The reliability is proven . I will likely keep the car for 10 years . My current diesel Octavia has 365k km and is still going fine . My question is to the electric car folks. 1. Have you noticed your esb bill going up ? 2. Are you concerned about depreciation? 3. Any concerns of the long term reliability of thr battery ? I just do not see the appeal on any level . Most people seem to disagree with me . To me for long term ownership it just does not add up .
If you do long journeys and/or lots of driving then an EV probably isn't the best option.
Possibly, but if they are doing longer daily journeys, in sales roles etc, then EV's won't fit the bill for a few years yet.I'm thinking the opposite...those who do long daily commutes (upto 300km return) would really benefit from a EV...the running costs & servicing would be much, much cheaper.
If you do very little driving then a second hand car of any type is more environmentally friendly than a new car of any type since around half the carbon footprint of a car for its entire lifetime is produced during its manufacture.
Have you a source for that?That's not the case any more. For EVs, manufacturing is around 1/4 of its total carbon footprint, for ICE cars it's around 1/8th.
Have you aa source for that?But over its lifetime an average ICE will have about 2x the carbon footprint of an EV, even if the EV is charged from electricity generated from a high-greenhouse gas source.
I agree with you there.So a 2nd hand car is better than a new one, but a 2nd hand EV is best.
Or the drive dies. So murdering an EV driver is green...And of course there can be no second-hand EVs unless people buy new ones.
Your too vague in your posts for people to advise if an EV is suited to you.I am in the market for a used car . 2-3 years old . Budget around 28k. I still believe diesel is the best way to go . The reliability is proven . I will likely keep the car for 10 years . My current diesel Octavia has 365k km and is still going fine . My question is to the electric car folks. 1. Have you noticed your esb bill going up ? 2. Are you concerned about depreciation? 3. Any concerns of the long term reliability of thr battery ? I just do not see the appeal on any level . Most people seem to disagree with me . To me for long term ownership it just does not add up .
True but I'm thinking about the commuters from the border counties around Dublin who are currently driving diesels. An EV might save them a lot of cash.Possibly, but if they are doing longer daily journeys, in sales roles etc, then EV's won't fit the bill for a few years yet.
The most I've paid for a service on a Hyundai Kona EV was €148. I've had 4 services: €59, €148, €73 and €96. I've also had two new tyres.Servicing has come up a few times in the these discussions - what is the (typical) cost of servicing for an EV ? Is it much lower than a typical diesel / petrol car (standard service) ? Has anyone here gone through servicing of their EVs in recent months that would share the serving costs ?
Service on our Nissan Leafs in Dublin is €120 per year each. You get the usual report back about needing tyres, brake pads, brake fluid change etc. which I tend to take to a regular shop around the corner to get done for half the price.Servicing has come up a few times in the these discussions - what is the (typical) cost of servicing for an EV ? Is it much lower than a typical diesel / petrol car (standard service) ? Has anyone here gone through servicing of their EVs in recent months that would share the serving costs ?
EVs and Batteries for EVs that are made in China are significantly dirtier as China uses far more coal to generate power. The top 10 battery manufacturers are located in Asia, mainly in China. Around half of all EV batteries are made in China. Info here.Many sources available but here is a nice summary with clear graphs: https://www.iea.org/data-and-statis...s-emissions-of-a-mid-size-bev-and-ice-vehicle
See also: https://energy.mit.edu/wp-content/u...ts-into-Future-Mobility-Executive-Summary.pdf and https://www.epa.gov/greenvehicles/electric-vehicle-myths#Myth5
Those data and studies are all based on current electricity production mix, which is steadily becoming greener. On the other hand, petrol and diesel can never decarbonise.
but would you agree if buying a new car (which i know is inherently not environmentally friendly) it would be better to go ev, even for your local environment i.e. the car is built now but at least you wont be burning diesel locally.EVs and Batteries for EVs that are made in China are significantly dirtier as China uses far more coal to generate power. The top 10 battery manufacturers are located in Asia, mainly in China. Around half of all EV batteries are made in China. Info here.
The PR from car manufacturers about going green should be taken with a large pinch of salt. Their track record in that area isn't exactly exemplary.
When we actually embrace clean energy that will change but until then I'll remain sceptical.
Yes, absolutely.but would you agree if buying a new car (which i know is inherently not environmentally friendly) it would be better to go ev, even for your local environment i.e. the car is built now but at least you wont be burning diesel locally.
But we all know there is disagreement somewhere on practically everything under the sun, probably even on the day of the week.Yes, there is some disagreement. We're disagreeing here. That doesn't mean I'm "conceding" anything.
I gave my view, which is in line with the UN, NASA, the WWF and the EU, the CIA and the NSA, and I further pointed out that some people disagreed with that view.
There are people who give specific long term predictions, like that there'll be no snow in the UK in 20 years, and they are often wrong. That doesn't mean that the underlying data they are using to build their predictions are wrong.
If I say "It's cold so it's going to snow" and it turns out it doesn't show that doesn't mean it also wasn't cold.
except to acknowledge uncertainty?There is some disagreement on what the long term impacts of climate change will be but we know what the climate is changing and we know that we are by far the biggest factor causing it to change.
Please don't restart the same passive aggressive insults that derailed earlier conversations. Your point here is superfluous as nobody here has yet questioned whether climate change is happening or whether we are the primary cause.Only the wilfully stupid disagree that climate change is happening or that we are the primary cause. It's tantamount to disagreeing that smoking increases the risk of lung cancer or that evolution is real.