Now check where teslas lithium from Australia is refined. And all the other precious metals. You're getting closer.
nortex97 said:Manhattan said:
And no Model Y sold in the US has a Chinese made battery.
The RWD Model 3 has a Chinese made battery, but you can get one of those for $36,220 + delivery, tt&l so who cares where the battery is made.
Every battery in every single ev sold contains a multitude of rare and precious metals controlled by and processed by the ccp. In quantities an order of magnitude greater than a phone.
The category confusion some have about that is akin to equating a pimple to skin cancer.
That wasn't a dictation, it was a statement of what the market forces are going to do. EVs are on a convergence with ICE vehicles by maintaining/reducing component costs while ICE increases in price. They are unlikely to end at that convergence point. Even absent CAFE standards EVs would outcompete ICE as the reduction in efficiency requirements only worsens the financial equation for ICE.TX AG 88 said:Quote:
The suggestion that we can demand continuance of oil consumption for transportation is non-sense.
The suggestion that you can tell "us" what we can or can't demand (with our patronage and dollars) is tyranny.
Biden's clean energy czar John Podesta said Chinese companies will be 'big players' in future US energy production & EV manufacturing, nothing Chinese firms would be able to take advantage of Biden's Inflation Reduction Act & Chips & Science Act.https://t.co/CADO1yELDu
— Ben Tallmadge (@BenTallmadge01) September 19, 2023
cecil77 said:
Again, it's the mandates. Let the market do what it will do. The mandates are absolutely tyranny..
Which is causing artificial and premature increases in oil prices…by design?Teslag said:cecil77 said:
Again, it's the mandates. Let the market do what it will do. The mandates are absolutely tyranny..
Look at the post below yours. It's not just the mandates. It's people with oil and gas ties sensing the gravy train is about to come to an end.
It appears quite a few consumers are making decisions that goes against some people's own political wishes and they are now left with crackpot conspiracy theories to try to explain away those decisions rather than admit, yeah, there is some significant public demand for EVs.Teslag said:
Yes, the Model Y is the most popular car in America because consumers want them due to massive conspiracy
Was Newsweek part of the conspiracy back in 2008 when they pointed out why the trade offs to make a 50 mpg Focus would make it a $50K car?Bubblez said:It appears quite a few consumers are making decisions that goes against some people's own political wishes and they are now left with crackpot conspiracy theories to try to explain away those decisions rather than admit, yeah, there is some significant public demand for EVs.Teslag said:
Yes, the Model Y is the most popular car in America because consumers want them due to massive conspiracy
Teslag said:cecil77 said:
Again, it's the mandates. Let the market do what it will do. The mandates are absolutely tyranny..
Look at the post below yours. It's not just the mandates. It's people with oil and gas ties sensing the gravy train is about to come to an end.
nortex97 said:Was Newsweek part of the conspiracy back in 2008 when they pointed out why the trade offs to make a 50 mpg Focus would make it a $50K car?Bubblez said:It appears quite a few consumers are making decisions that goes against some people's own political wishes and they are now left with crackpot conspiracy theories to try to explain away those decisions rather than admit, yeah, there is some significant public demand for EVs.Teslag said:
Yes, the Model Y is the most popular car in America because consumers want them due to massive conspiracy
The Focus is dead here now, and Biden just mandated 50 MPG CAFE standards coming up. Meanwhile, Ford is losing billions on EV's. Weird conspiracy.
agracer said:
In this entire thread, has anyone figured out where all the electricity to charge these vehicles is going to come from?
techno-ag said:agracer said:
In this entire thread, has anyone figured out where all the electricity to charge these vehicles is going to come from?
agracer said:
In this entire thread, has anyone figured out where all the electricity to charge these vehicles is going to come from?
agracer said:
In this entire thread, has anyone figured out where all the electricity to charge these vehicles is going to come from?
agracer said:
In this entire thread, has anyone figured out where all the electricity to charge these vehicles is going to come from?
Almost all of that added capacity, especially that added at night, will come from petroleum (natural gas) powered generation. There is nothing anti-oil and gas about BEV's.Kansas Kid said:agracer said:
In this entire thread, has anyone figured out where all the electricity to charge these vehicles is going to come from?
Electricity demand doubled from 1975 to 2000 and I don't recall any mass concerns. I believe a lot of this was the rise of computers and Universal A/C both of which have demand that peaks during the day. Assuming the NIMBY folks don't prevent new capacity from coming on (a not insignificant concern), the utilities are good at adding capacity as needed. Even CA had overcome most of their issues on electricity shortage from the early 2000s. Funny how the free market works.
nortex97 said:Almost all of that added capacity, especially that added at night, will come from petroleum (natural gas) powered generation. There is nothing anti-oil and gas about BEV's.Kansas Kid said:agracer said:
In this entire thread, has anyone figured out where all the electricity to charge these vehicles is going to come from?
Electricity demand doubled from 1975 to 2000 and I don't recall any mass concerns. I believe a lot of this was the rise of computers and Universal A/C both of which have demand that peaks during the day. Assuming the NIMBY folks don't prevent new capacity from coming on (a not insignificant concern), the utilities are good at adding capacity as needed. Even CA had overcome most of their issues on electricity shortage from the early 2000s. Funny how the free market works.
There is also a massive 'last mile' infrastructure upgrade in distribution required for this transition, requiring a lot of energy to produce/install the copper etc.
cecil77 said:
Just as an aside, does anyone on this thread really spend so much time filling up with fuel that it's a noticeable amount of time at all? I just don't think time spent refueling is a thing at all. And honestly, cost savings on fuel is not that big a deal either. How many of you even notice the price when refueling? I don't, really.
And it's a paradox, the EV fans tout less time refueling, the ICE fans tout less time refueling.
You may not be saying it, but those forcing the mandates on us are insisting wind and solar are going to power our future, which is a lot of the same unicorn farts and rainbows mentioned earlier. Neither of which can exist without O&G. And there are plenty of posters on this board who are preaching the same use of solar and wind and batteries to power our future.Kansas Kid said:nortex97 said:Almost all of that added capacity, especially that added at night, will come from petroleum (natural gas) powered generation. There is nothing anti-oil and gas about BEV's.Kansas Kid said:agracer said:
In this entire thread, has anyone figured out where all the electricity to charge these vehicles is going to come from?
Electricity demand doubled from 1975 to 2000 and I don't recall any mass concerns. I believe a lot of this was the rise of computers and Universal A/C both of which have demand that peaks during the day. Assuming the NIMBY folks don't prevent new capacity from coming on (a not insignificant concern), the utilities are good at adding capacity as needed. Even CA had overcome most of their issues on electricity shortage from the early 2000s. Funny how the free market works.
There is also a massive 'last mile' infrastructure upgrade in distribution required for this transition, requiring a lot of energy to produce/install the copper etc.
I have never said it wasn't going to be nat gas providing a lot of the marginal electricity and I don't know anyone on this board that has either. As for the grid, experts have been calling for a massive investment in it for a few decades.
Then again, you don't care to listen or hear any other opinion because you hate the mandates which almost everyone on this board does as well. Based on your comments, you haven't spent any real time in an EV. For those people that have, they really like them and almost all would buy another. They buy them because of either performance, cool technology, ability to charge at home while sleeping instead of going to a gas station, lower maintenance, because they like the look, etc. The same EV buyers also see the limitations and also have an ICE as a second vehicle.
agracer said:You may not be saying it, but those forcing the mandates on us are insisting wind and solar are going to power our future, which is a lot of the same unicorn farts and rainbows mentioned earlier. Neither of which can exist without O&G. And there are plenty of posters on this board who are preaching the same use of solar and wind and batteries to power our future.Kansas Kid said:nortex97 said:Almost all of that added capacity, especially that added at night, will come from petroleum (natural gas) powered generation. There is nothing anti-oil and gas about BEV's.Kansas Kid said:agracer said:
In this entire thread, has anyone figured out where all the electricity to charge these vehicles is going to come from?
Electricity demand doubled from 1975 to 2000 and I don't recall any mass concerns. I believe a lot of this was the rise of computers and Universal A/C both of which have demand that peaks during the day. Assuming the NIMBY folks don't prevent new capacity from coming on (a not insignificant concern), the utilities are good at adding capacity as needed. Even CA had overcome most of their issues on electricity shortage from the early 2000s. Funny how the free market works.
There is also a massive 'last mile' infrastructure upgrade in distribution required for this transition, requiring a lot of energy to produce/install the copper etc.
I have never said it wasn't going to be nat gas providing a lot of the marginal electricity and I don't know anyone on this board that has either. As for the grid, experts have been calling for a massive investment in it for a few decades.
Then again, you don't care to listen or hear any other opinion because you hate the mandates which almost everyone on this board does as well. Based on your comments, you haven't spent any real time in an EV. For those people that have, they really like them and almost all would buy another. They buy them because of either performance, cool technology, ability to charge at home while sleeping instead of going to a gas station, lower maintenance, because they like the look, etc. The same EV buyers also see the limitations and also have an ICE as a second vehicle.
Let's also not forget the insistence on "carbon neutrality" which is going to add ever more load to the grid that doesn't have the capacity for that additional load.
And those experts have been calling for grid improvement for years, but it's really not happening fast enough to meet the fantasy land demands of those same mandates.
nortex97 said:
Nice word wall, haha.
Didn't read it all as I'm driving but electricity is a terrible way to store energy fyi.
I will never buy an ev.
Teslag said:nortex97 said:
Nice word wall, haha.
Didn't read it all as I'm driving but electricity is a terrible way to store energy fyi.
I will never buy an ev.
Redeemer, this poster is here for honest discussion, doesn't troll, and always takes the high road.
ChemAg15 said:Teslag said:nortex97 said:
Nice word wall, haha.
Didn't read it all as I'm driving but electricity is a terrible way to store energy fyi.
I will never buy an ev.
Redeemer, this poster is here for honest discussion, doesn't troll, and always takes the high road.
The UK is a relatively small island with limited natural resources and a very different culture/economy than the US.Bubblez said:
Looks like the UK is pushing back their full EV transition to 2035, though still expects the vast majority of vehicles sold in 2030 to be EVs.
The automakers thought the CAFE standards of the 1980's were completely unrealistic, but look where we are now. Far better off. Imagine the price of oil if we still had the 1980's fuel economy standards.aggieforester05 said:The UK is a relatively small island with limited natural resources and a very different culture/economy than the US.Bubblez said:
Looks like the UK is pushing back their full EV transition to 2035, though still expects the vast majority of vehicles sold in 2030 to be EVs.
Forcing rural Americans into EVs via mandates is a tyrannical and ****ty thing to do by coastal liberals that live and work in dense population centers. These people are completely oblivious to the lifestyle and needs of people that don't live the same lifestyle they do.
That's what happens when you're completely brainwashed by progressive propaganda that use the climate change boogeyman to fear monger you into voting for a party of degenerate sociopaths that only care about enriching themselves and their wealthy donors via green energy scams.
There's nothing wrong with offering EV options, but mandating unrealistic CAFE standards in a blatant attempt to make ICE vehicle production unsustainable is ethically wrong and an extremely poor economic decision.