2.2 million litres of water to produce 1 ton of lithium-EVs are doomed

12,051 Views | 172 Replies | Last: 2 yr ago by rab79
JamesPShelley
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Esteban du Plantier said:

Stuff sometimes requires a lot of water.

None of you guys will all of the sudden start complaining about hamburgers when I tell you it takes almost 2000 gallons of water to produce a pound of beef.
Likewise almonds.

Remove almond growing from the central valley in CA, and there goes our "drought".

****ing Newsom.
C@LAg
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Esteban du Plantier said:

Stuff sometimes requires a lot of water.

None of you guys will all of the sudden start complaining about hamburgers when I tell you it takes almost 2000 gallons of water to produce a pound of beef.
and yet, most of that water is expelled as breath, piss or ****, which can all be recycled/reused to some extent, as fertilizer, as moisture in the air, etc./

while poisoned EV mining water is just that. poisoned mining water, that permanently contaminates the soil, local water sources, kills wildlife, etc.
Funky Winkerbean
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Teslag said:

Funky Winkerbean said:

Why do we "need" electric vehicles?
Because many people want and prefer them. Everyone should have a choice. If a market exists, it should be served.
I agree with you on it being market driven, but hasn't the market been artificially created by the government claiming fossil fuels cause climate change?
tk for tu juan
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IslanderAg04 said:

tk for tu juan said:

Red Red Wine said:

How many ICE vehicles just sitting in your garage or parked on the street just spontaneously combust???

Oh, yeah, that's right - ZERO!!!

https://money.usnews.com/investing/news/articles/2022-08-23/kia-telluride-and-hyundai-palisade-owners-should-park-outside-over-fire-risk-dept-of-transportation


Which involves moisture in an electrical harness for towing. Once again, an electrical fire that has nothing to do with the ICE components. Maybe you can mention ford pinto's exploding.

He said ICE vehicles, which is the category that the Telluride and Palisade fall under. No need to mention the Pinto's bumper bolts being driven into the gas tank during a collision, there are plenty of Dodge Rams since then that self-immolate in the driveways
IslanderAg04
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tk for tu juan said:

IslanderAg04 said:

tk for tu juan said:

Red Red Wine said:

How many ICE vehicles just sitting in your garage or parked on the street just spontaneously combust???

Oh, yeah, that's right - ZERO!!!

https://money.usnews.com/investing/news/articles/2022-08-23/kia-telluride-and-hyundai-palisade-owners-should-park-outside-over-fire-risk-dept-of-transportation


Which involves moisture in an electrical harness for towing. Once again, an electrical fire that has nothing to do with the ICE components. Maybe you can mention ford pinto's exploding.

He said ICE vehicles, which is the category that the Telluride and Palisade fall under. No need to mention the Pinto's bumper bolts being driven into the gas tank during a collision, there are plenty of Dodge Rams since then that self-immolate in the driveways


So comparing a faulting electrical tow harness, to the spontaneous combustion of a critical component of an EV. Makes sense. Hows about random lithium battery fires banning Samsung Note 11's from all flights?
HalifaxAg
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Esteban du Plantier said:

Stuff sometimes requires a lot of water.

None of you guys will all of the sudden start complaining about hamburgers when I tell you it takes almost 2000 gallons of water to produce a pound of beef.
Maybe, but the Earth can filter cow piss pretty easily...
tk for tu juan
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IslanderAg04 said:

tk for tu juan said:

IslanderAg04 said:

tk for tu juan said:

Red Red Wine said:

How many ICE vehicles just sitting in your garage or parked on the street just spontaneously combust???

Oh, yeah, that's right - ZERO!!!

https://money.usnews.com/investing/news/articles/2022-08-23/kia-telluride-and-hyundai-palisade-owners-should-park-outside-over-fire-risk-dept-of-transportation


Which involves moisture in an electrical harness for towing. Once again, an electrical fire that has nothing to do with the ICE components. Maybe you can mention ford pinto's exploding.

He said ICE vehicles, which is the category that the Telluride and Palisade fall under. No need to mention the Pinto's bumper bolts being driven into the gas tank during a collision, there are plenty of Dodge Rams since then that self-immolate in the driveways


So comparing a faulting electrical tow harness, to the spontaneous combustion of a critical component of an EV. Makes sense. Hows about random lithium battery fires banning Samsung Note 11's from all flights?

WGAS where it started, vehicle fires occur in both ICE and EV vehicles, including when both are stationary. Facts and fire
Teslag
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Funky Winkerbean said:

Teslag said:

Funky Winkerbean said:

Why do we "need" electric vehicles?
Because many people want and prefer them. Everyone should have a choice. If a market exists, it should be served.
I agree with you on it being market driven, but hasn't the market been artificially created by the government claiming fossil fuels cause climate change?


No. Tesla lost their tax subsidies and credits years ago. Since that time they have had record sales and demand. People want their vehicles regardless of credits. Even with the new law it's doubtful Tesla gets any of the credits due to materials sourcing and labor requirements.
Teslag
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IslanderAg04 said:

Teslag said:

Funky Winkerbean said:

Why do we "need" electric vehicles?
Because many people want and prefer them. Everyone should have a choice. If a market exists, it should be served.


If they do, why do they need government subsidies? Isn't that unneeded govt market influence?


They don't need them as seen from Teslas last 4 years of sales and demand without tax credits.
Teslag
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Funky Winkerbean said:

People buying electric vehicles are virtue signalers.


Dumb
Esteban du Plantier
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C@LAg said:

Esteban du Plantier said:

Stuff sometimes requires a lot of water.

None of you guys will all of the sudden start complaining about hamburgers when I tell you it takes almost 2000 gallons of water to produce a pound of beef.
and yet, most of that water is expelled as breath, piss or ****, which can all be recycled/reused to some extent, as fertilizer, as moisture in the air, etc./

while poisoned EV mining water is just that. poisoned mining water, that permanently contaminates the soil, local water sources, kills wildlife, etc.


These are evaporation ponds to concentrate lithium salts.

What else is evaporating? All that water just goes back to the environment.

I'm not an EV fanboy or anything, but if you're going to criticize EV, do it honestly. Maybe the mining is damaging, but the water use? None of you give a **** about water use.
Funky Winkerbean
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Teslag said:

Funky Winkerbean said:

People buying electric vehicles are virtue signalers.


Dumb
Not.
Funky Winkerbean
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Teslag said:

Funky Winkerbean said:

Teslag said:

Funky Winkerbean said:

Why do we "need" electric vehicles?
Because many people want and prefer them. Everyone should have a choice. If a market exists, it should be served.
I agree with you on it being market driven, but hasn't the market been artificially created by the government claiming fossil fuels cause climate change?


No. Tesla lost their tax subsidies and credits years ago. Since that time they have had record sales and demand. People want their vehicles regardless of credits. Even with the new law it's doubtful Tesla gets any of the credits due to materials sourcing and labor requirements.
That has nothing to do with what I said.
Bill Clinternet
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B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.
"I am neither an Athenian nor a Greek, but a citizen of the world"-Plato, attributed to Socrates, Theaetetus-
WHOOP!'91
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Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.
Petroleum extraction consists of drilling a hole, not strip mining large swaths of surface area. Gonna have to disagree with you here, not surprisingly.
Bill Clinternet
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WHOOP!'91 said:

Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.
Petroleum extraction consists of drilling a hole, not strip mining large swaths of surface area. Gonna have to disagree with you here, not surprisingly.
Of course you do.
"I am neither an Athenian nor a Greek, but a citizen of the world"-Plato, attributed to Socrates, Theaetetus-
B-1 83
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Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.
Not recognizing the difference between surface mining of lithium and related metals from third world countries (the major source of such metals) and the ChiCom ownership of such facilities, vs extraction of oil and gas in the USA is ridiculous and willingly naive.
Being in TexAgs jail changes a man……..no, not really
WHOOP!'91
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Neehau said:

WHOOP!'91 said:

Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.
Petroleum extraction consists of drilling a hole, not strip mining large swaths of surface area. Gonna have to disagree with you here, not surprisingly.
Of course you do.
Since you're wrong and I'm right, as usual, it should surprise no one.

Care to post a photo of petroleum extraction to show how it is as bad as surface mining? You Marxists complain about laying a pipeline scarring mother Gaia, you should be happy about petroleum extraction's relatively minimal impact.

https://www.cred.org/seven-steps-of-oil-and-natural-gas-extraction/



...and mud it up when you're done. A couple of years, it's like you were never there.
Bill Clinternet
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B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.
Not recognizing the difference between surface mining of lithium and related metals from third world countries (the major source of such metals) and the ChiCom ownership of such facilities, vs extraction of oil and gas in the USA is ridiculous and willingly naive.
Oh I recognize the difference. I think the summation of it's harm is politically and economically biased....in addition to being disingenuous and intellectual poppycock.
"I am neither an Athenian nor a Greek, but a citizen of the world"-Plato, attributed to Socrates, Theaetetus-
rgag12
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Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.




That's rich. Have you seen a movie recently? Bought and paid for by the "green" lobby
CDUB98
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Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.


Then what is your solution, genius?
Bill Clinternet
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WHOOP!'91 said:

Neehau said:

WHOOP!'91 said:

Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.
Petroleum extraction consists of drilling a hole, not strip mining large swaths of surface area. Gonna have to disagree with you here, not surprisingly.
Of course you do.
Since you're wrong and I'm right, as usual, it should surprise no one.

Care to post a photo of petroleum extraction to show how it is as bad as surface mining? You Marxists complain about laying a pipeline scarring mother Gaia, you should be happy about petroleum extraction's relatively minimal impact.

https://www.cred.org/seven-steps-of-oil-and-natural-gas-extraction/



...and mud it up when you're done. A couple of years, it's like you were never there.
You are making a false equivalency....What was oil extraction like during the time of Spindletop?
"I am neither an Athenian nor a Greek, but a citizen of the world"-Plato, attributed to Socrates, Theaetetus-
CDUB98
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Quote:

What was oil extraction like during the time of Spindletop?


Irrelevant.
Bill Clinternet
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CDUB98 said:

Quote:

What was oil extraction like during the time of Spindletop?


Irrelevant.
Absolutely relevant. Wrong sir.
"I am neither an Athenian nor a Greek, but a citizen of the world"-Plato, attributed to Socrates, Theaetetus-
richardag
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David Wallace said:

. . . . . . .
super harmful to the environment and use massive amounts of water.

So, what the heck are we doing?.

. . . . .
"Lithium KILLING Fields"

Quote:

Lithium. . . . . . . .

What we, meaning the corrupt governments, globalists and climate zealots, are doing is funding their back pockets. Governments globally are using tax dollars to selectively fund green companies they have a vested interest in(with a few countries like China that are reaping huge profits for their oligarchs)
CDUB98
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Neehau said:

CDUB98 said:

Quote:

What was oil extraction like during the time of Spindletop?


Irrelevant.
Absolutely relevant. Wrong sir.


Yes it is. The industry doesn't work that way anymore, nor has it for a very long time.

As always, you show that you are absolutely clueless about the subject at hand and have no coherent argument based in reality.
WHOOP!'91
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Neehau said:

WHOOP!'91 said:

Neehau said:

WHOOP!'91 said:

Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.
Petroleum extraction consists of drilling a hole, not strip mining large swaths of surface area. Gonna have to disagree with you here, not surprisingly.
Of course you do.
Since you're wrong and I'm right, as usual, it should surprise no one.

Care to post a photo of petroleum extraction to show how it is as bad as surface mining? You Marxists complain about laying a pipeline scarring mother Gaia, you should be happy about petroleum extraction's relatively minimal impact.

https://www.cred.org/seven-steps-of-oil-and-natural-gas-extraction/



...and mud it up when you're done. A couple of years, it's like you were never there.
You are making a false equivalency....What was oil extraction like during the time of Spindletop?
Relevance?

But ok...oil came out until they capped it, then a lot like today except we capture and sell the natgas instead of burning it off.



Still nothing like strip mining. And still irrelevant. Even if lithium mining is cleaner in 120 years, what does that mean today?
B-1 83
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Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

B-1 83 said:

Neehau said:

This is oil company lobby propaganda.


I see troll boy disappeared after dropping this bombshell………..with nothing to back it up. Classic.
Any type of resource extraction is harmful to the planet. This is because removing these raw materials can result in soil degradation, water shortages, biodiversity loss, damage to ecosystem functions and an increase in global warming.

Trying to play it off as lithium mining being any worse than petroleum extraction or any other mining is ridiculous.
Not recognizing the difference between surface mining of lithium and related metals from third world countries (the major source of such metals) and the ChiCom ownership of such facilities, vs extraction of oil and gas in the USA is ridiculous and willingly naive.
Oh I recognize the difference. I think the summation of it's harm is politically and economically biased....in addition to being disingenuous and intellectual poppycock.
"Politically and economically biased"????????????" How dense are you? Who controls the lithium and major earth metal battery components? By definition, it is a huge political and economic liability to hitch ourselves to China's wagon.

https://www.barrons.com/articles/china-ev-batteries-lithium-mining-51652889888


https://www.forbes.com/sites/rrapier/2022/01/11/the-us-is-losing-the-lithium-industry-to-china/?sh=6feed46416a1
Being in TexAgs jail changes a man……..no, not really
Bill Clinternet
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CDUB98 said:

Neehau said:

CDUB98 said:

Quote:

What was oil extraction like during the time of Spindletop?


Irrelevant.
Absolutely relevant. Wrong sir.


Yes it is. The industry doesn't work that way anymore, nor has it for a very long time.

As always, you show that you are absolutely clueless about the subject at hand and have no coherent argument based in reality.
You are missing the point. I have complete faith in the free market to ensure lithium mining is as clean as possible. This will happen organically. Much like oil extractions trajectory.
"I am neither an Athenian nor a Greek, but a citizen of the world"-Plato, attributed to Socrates, Theaetetus-
B-1 83
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Neehau said:

CDUB98 said:

Quote:

What was oil extraction like during the time of Spindletop?


Irrelevant.
Absolutely relevant. Wrong sir.
After eons as a civilization, China is still a shiphole that pays little attention to environmental concerns, and darn sure has the opportunity and technology to do so in its foreign holdings.
https://e360.yale.edu/features/china-wrestles-with-the-toxic-aftermath-of-rare-earth-mining

Pssssssssssssst! They.don't.care.

When I thought you couldn't top your self with wishful/naive drivel, you post nonsense like this.
Being in TexAgs jail changes a man……..no, not really
MouthBQ98
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Yes, there are commons issues with environmental consequences of mining. The third world where much of this is done is far less concerned about them than the we are. There's a sufficient public interest for reasonable regulation if the threat of legal liability actions or bad press is inadequate to result in responsible management of negative environmental consequences.

The idea is to have the lightest hand possible to obtain adequate results. Government often clumsily or even vindictively goes beyond that.
WHOOP!'91
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Neehau said:

CDUB98 said:

Neehau said:

CDUB98 said:

Quote:

What was oil extraction like during the time of Spindletop?


Irrelevant.
Absolutely relevant. Wrong sir.


Yes it is. The industry doesn't work that way anymore, nor has it for a very long time.

As always, you show that you are absolutely clueless about the subject at hand and have no coherent argument based in reality.
You are missing the point. I have complete faith in the free market to ensure lithium mining is as clean as possible. This will happen organically. Much like oil extractions trajectory.
It isn't happening organically now. Governments have to give credits and incentives to get people off the cheaper, more reliable power sources. If it was happening organically, you would hear a lot less complaining from conservatives. Your mention of the free market is laughable in this context.
Bill Clinternet
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WHOOP!'91 said:

Neehau said:

CDUB98 said:

Neehau said:

CDUB98 said:

Quote:

What was oil extraction like during the time of Spindletop?


Irrelevant.
Absolutely relevant. Wrong sir.


Yes it is. The industry doesn't work that way anymore, nor has it for a very long time.

As always, you show that you are absolutely clueless about the subject at hand and have no coherent argument based in reality.
You are missing the point. I have complete faith in the free market to ensure lithium mining is as clean as possible. This will happen organically. Much like oil extractions trajectory.
It isn't happening organically now. Governments have to give credits and incentives to get people off the cheaper, more reliable power sources. If it was happening organically, you would hear a lot less complaining from conservatives. Your mention of the free market is laughable in this context.
Conservative are complaining because of propaganda, fox news and the oil lobby. Otherwise, they shouldnt give a ***** Its smart economics even if someone doesn't understand it.
"I am neither an Athenian nor a Greek, but a citizen of the world"-Plato, attributed to Socrates, Theaetetus-
Teslag
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Funky Winkerbean said:

Teslag said:

Funky Winkerbean said:

Teslag said:

Funky Winkerbean said:

Why do we "need" electric vehicles?
Because many people want and prefer them. Everyone should have a choice. If a market exists, it should be served.
I agree with you on it being market driven, but hasn't the market been artificially created by the government claiming fossil fuels cause climate change?


No. Tesla lost their tax subsidies and credits years ago. Since that time they have had record sales and demand. People want their vehicles regardless of credits. Even with the new law it's doubtful Tesla gets any of the credits due to materials sourcing and labor requirements.
That has nothing to do with what I said.

It absolutely does. The market for Teslas don't exist because of tax credits. It exists because people like and want the cars because of the product, and the last 4 years of sales without tax credits prove that.
Teslag
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There is nothing wrong with strip mining. If you are completely opposed to strip mining you'd better get rid of everything you own and live in a cave because chances are almost all the **** in your house in some way came from a strip mine.
 
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