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Electric Cars: Help Or Hurt The Environment


The Future of Electric Vehicles

Definition

According to the UCSUSA (Union of Concerned Scientists), electric cars are defined as: “Cars that run at least partially on electricity. Unlike conventional vehicles that use a gasoline or diesel-powered engine, electric cars and trucks use an electric motor powered by electricity from batteries or a fuel cell.”

#1. Electric Vehicles Can Help Keep Our World Clean 

When beginning this discussion this is the number one thing to take away. Stop. Period. We will dive further into the details and pros vs cons, but this is crucial to remember above all. A choice to use clean energy and stop behaviors that are destructive to the environment.

#2. Fewer Emissions

EV’s produce less greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to climate change and smog. All-electric vehicles produce zero direct emissions. When battery electric EV’s are powered by the cleanest electricity grids, greenhouse gas emissions from EV’s are comparable to a car getting over 100 miles per gallon

Plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV’s), which have a gasoline engine plus an electric motor, produce evaporative emissions when operating on gasoline. However, because most PHEV’s are more efficient than their comparable counterparts, they still produce fewer tailpipe emissions even when relying on gasoline.

#3. Money Saving

Refilling your car with clean electricity vs gasoline is going to cost you less every time. Overall, electric cars simply have a lower total cost of ownership. Switching to an electric car can save on average over $700-$1,000 a year in fueling costs. Bonus: there are still continuing federal and state incentives to purchase electric. 

Trying to clearly decipher the overall impact of electric cars vs traditional is a monumental task, one even entire governments are struggling with. Countries are coming out with competing reports and results. The data can be skewed leaning one way or the other. In the end, if you look at all the details, it seems clear, especially as time moves on and civilization becomes more advanced in ‘green’ practices and productions, that the overall benefit of making the change to electric is positive. To get educated in depth on the entire research database, please read this “Fact Check” report by Carbon Brief: Clean On Climate organization.

CONS

#1. Still A Fraction of Emissions Produced in Production

Life-cycle emissions related to vehicle production, processing, distribution, use, and recycling and disposal still exist with EV’s. But, EV life-cycle emissions are quite a bit lower than your average car because most emissions are lower for electricity generation than burning gasoline or diesel. A way to continue to further minimize life-cycle emissions is to use electricity generated by renewable sources like solar and wind.  

#2. Higher Cost Upfront

Biting the bullet and putting out a bit more extra cash at the onset stops a lot of buyers from going electric. But if you do the math, over time, you will actually save a LOT of money. 

Which Electric Car Is Best

Conventional Hybrids

Learn more about how hybrids work.

Plug-in Hybrids 

Learn more about how plug-in vehicles work.

Battery-Electric 

Learn more about how battery-electrics work.

Fuel Cell Vehicles

Learn more about how fuel cells and fuel cell vehicles work.

The Future

As Forbes reported for their investors, every developed country around the world is seeing a continued increase in electric cars in the coming years. JP Morgan concurs. As Car & Driver states, “Electric cars are the future, and each year we’ve seen automakers add more EV’s to their lineup. Everyone is working on electric vehicles.” Basically, if you don’t like eclectic, get out of the way!

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