Meet George Jetson . . .CanyonAg77 said:
I'm still waiting on the flying cars GM forecast in the 1930s
Meet George Jetson . . .CanyonAg77 said:
I'm still waiting on the flying cars GM forecast in the 1930s
I'm hoping though they try to find all they can find and then I'll divest myself of that misadventure.MouthBQ98 said:
We don't have enough lithium. We simply don't.
amercer said:
They said it doesn't apply to trucks.
Just cars and SUVs
Quote in OP says trucks, too. I agree with you that they will back away from trucks and SUVs.ChemEAg08 said:amercer said:
They said it doesn't apply to trucks.
Just cars and SUVs
They'll quietly back out of suvs as well.
So virtue signaling GM is going green around the globe in places that absolutely wreck the environment? Yeah, I'm gonna call BS on that one.Shanked Punt said:Quote:
The company plans to use 100% renewable energy to power its U.S. facilities by 2030 and global facilities by 2035 five years ahead of a previously announced goal.
MouthBQ98 said:
We don't have enough lithium. We simply don't.
jja79 said:
Where are they going to dispose of all the batteries? Strip mine a mountain away and put them in a landfill? Great environmentalists. They're so stupid they don't even know they're stupid.
ChemEAg08 said:amercer said:
They said it doesn't apply to trucks.
Just cars and SUVs
They'll quietly back out of suvs as well.
Magic City Wings said:jja79 said:
Where are they going to dispose of all the batteries? Strip mine a mountain away and put them in a landfill? Great environmentalists. They're so stupid they don't even know they're stupid.
Someone is going to get rich figuring out how to economically recycle them.
I don't know, but lithium was the 3rd most abundant atom at the birth of the universe. Seems it is somewhere around the 27th most abundant mineral in the earth. BUT, it is toxic and mining is dangerous and dirty. Soooo we pollute the environment to save the environment. Let alone cobalt mining.MouthBQ98 said:
We don't have enough lithium. We simply don't.
Quote:
Lithium toxicity, also known as lithium overdose, is the condition of having too much lithium.[url=https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithium_toxicity#cite_note-Stat2019-1][1][/url] Symptoms may include a tremor, increased reflexes, trouble walking, kidney problems, and an altered level of consciousness.[url=https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithium_toxicity#cite_note-Stat2019-1][1][/url] Some symptoms may last for a year after levels return to normal.[url=https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithium_toxicity#cite_note-Stat2019-1][1][/url] Complications may include serotonin syndrome.[url=https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithium_toxicity#cite_note-Stat2019-1][1][/url]
I don't have a source since I was listening to SXM, but I think I heard that only HD vehicles would have internal combustion engines available.WHOOP!'91 said:Quote in OP says trucks, too. I agree with you that they will back away from trucks and SUVs.ChemEAg08 said:amercer said:
They said it doesn't apply to trucks.
Just cars and SUVs
They'll quietly back out of suvs as well.
Shut down natural gas production and replace it for generating electricity with ......Shanked Punt said:lol, coal is dying away. electric generation from coal in 2035 will be single digit small potatoes.Jbob04 said:Ol Rock said:
I wonder where all of that electricity will come from?
The shift to non-gas vehicles has to happen eventually. I hope GM can pull it off. The main problem isn't just the infrastructure, but making sure the power grids can keep up with the increased demands. This electricity has to come from somewhere.Shanked Punt said:
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/01/28/general-motors-plans-to-exclusively-offer-electric-vehicles-by-2035.html
This is great news all around, though hopefully they can bring in the deadline yet another five years or so. Its now time to get all the infrastructure in place. This can't come soon enough to help greatly reduce our dependency on oil.Quote:
DETROIT General Motors wants to end production of all diesel- and gasoline-powered cars, trucks and SUVs by 2035 and shift its entire new fleet to electric vehicles as part of a broader plan to become carbon neutral by 2040, the company said Thursday.
The company plans to use 100% renewable energy to power its U.S. facilities by 2030 and global facilities by 2035 five years ahead of a previously announced goal.
Lots of people said that about tires.Magic City Wings said:jja79 said:
Where are they going to dispose of all the batteries? Strip mine a mountain away and put them in a landfill? Great environmentalists. They're so stupid they don't even know they're stupid.
Someone is going to get rich figuring out how to economically recycle them.
Cassius said:ChemEAg08 said:amercer said:
They said it doesn't apply to trucks.
Just cars and SUVs
They'll quietly back out of suvs as well.
Shhh.. Mercer fancies himself a scientist and believes it
Signel said:
By 2035, the battery technology should be strong enough to support 1000+ miles a charge. I don't see why this is much of a big deal.
Magic City Wings said:jja79 said:
Where are they going to dispose of all the batteries? Strip mine a mountain away and put them in a landfill? Great environmentalists. They're so stupid they don't even know they're stupid.
Someone is going to get rich figuring out how to economically recycle them.
The market will find a way to whatever works if allowed, interesting though that the invention/refinement of steel belted radial tires has tripled the life of a set.Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:Lots of people said that about tires.Magic City Wings said:jja79 said:
Where are they going to dispose of all the batteries? Strip mine a mountain away and put them in a landfill? Great environmentalists. They're so stupid they don't even know they're stupid.
Someone is going to get rich figuring out how to economically recycle them.
Ever look up at how many tire dumps are out there that have been abandoned?
https://www.tceq.texas.gov/permitting/waste_permits/tires/tires-reporting#tirerptsum
+ 1000.chimpanzee said:Signel said:
By 2035, the battery technology should be strong enough to support 1000+ miles a charge. I don't see why this is much of a big deal.
If there were a way to know that for certain, and how supply chains and infrastructure could support it, it would be a gigantic deal. As in impossibly gigantic. Even over 20 years, the capital expenditures required to construct as electric and reliably charge the cars on the road today would soak up an almost unfathomable amount of investment for a money losing project.
If anyone right now knows how to make a battery that could support a 1000 mile range in a commercially self supporting product, they would be a trillionaire. The richest guy in the world makes one with a 400 mile EPA range (more like 270 at highway speed) and is losing money selling as many as he can make at $80k a pop. He sometimes makes a profit on the emission credits he sells to companies like GM.
Electric cars require someone else to pay for it and no business model shows otherwise, tech advancements may turn the corner someday, but the Tesla Model S has been around for nearly a decade and hasn't approached the kind of leaps in range performance that would be required to get near 1000 miles.
That was before there was a "***President***" going green.Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:Lots of people said that about tires.Magic City Wings said:jja79 said:
Where are they going to dispose of all the batteries? Strip mine a mountain away and put them in a landfill? Great environmentalists. They're so stupid they don't even know they're stupid.
Someone is going to get rich figuring out how to economically recycle them.
Ever look up at how many tire dumps are out there that have been abandoned?
https://www.tceq.texas.gov/permitting/waste_permits/tires/tires-reporting#tirerptsum
I'll be hoping to identify who that is so I can invest in them.Magic City Wings said:jja79 said:
Where are they going to dispose of all the batteries? Strip mine a mountain away and put them in a landfill? Great environmentalists. They're so stupid they don't even know they're stupid.
Someone is going to get rich figuring out how to economically recycle them.
Thats how teal cars end up hung in trees and abandoned at street corners.revvie said:
Grand goal. Current technology does not support. If and when tech can support 1000+ mile range and short recharge time(less than a couple of hours). Maybe it is time to invest in TAAS(Transportation as a Service) stocks. Drive to destination, turn car in at hotel and have fresh vehicle next morning to continue trip.