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China's New Craze: E-bikes

lawrencekhoo writes "I was in Shanghai recently, and found to my surprise that bicycle crazy China is now electric bicycle crazy. Electric bikes were everywhere, and outnumbered normal bikes on the road. You could even buy them in the department stores. Basic models sell for about 1200 Yuan (about US$150), and more elaborate scooter-like models for up to 5000 Yuan. Apparently, this craze has been building up for a few years. Something like it is even happening in parts of the US. According to one user, electric bikes are popular because they're cheap, and can take you all around town on one charge. Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?"

397 comments

  1. Language at the site by metlin · · Score: 1, Informative

    Nice language at the site.

    Breakes:

    Yes! Hit them hard enough and they just might.

    1. Re:Language at the site by superpeach · · Score: 1, Funny

      Color: yellow, red, green, blue, silver, etc.

      So, whats the etc. for? are they trying to say it can be any color as long as its a color.

    2. Re:Language at the site by txviking · · Score: 5, Insightful

      China was leading the green revolution for a long time .... With a lot of traditional bycicles....

    3. Re:Language at the site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the site:

      All your electric bicycles are belong to us.

    4. Re:Language at the site by The+Cydonian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, the view I had was that the bicycle had an almost Mao-ist appeal for at least most of the old guard there. An e-bike, therefore, is probably just the sort of post-modernist identity symbol that a contemporary Chinese would be interested in.

    5. Re:Language at the site by glenalec · · Score: 1

      Lucky they didn't say "and so on" which is one thing I have to spend a long long time getting my Chinese English students to stop doing in formal writing.

      --
      The man with no surname and a silly hat

      On the universe: It's bunk.
    6. Re:Language at the site by HyperCash · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That meme, that these bikes aren't green because they aren't as good for the environment as regular bikes, is really screwed up coming from this crowd. The Athlon or P4 you're writing these comments on probably use as much electricity as these e-bikes do. Not to mention that being mostly westerners we almost all drive cars. But everyone complains that these e-bikes are a bad developement because they aren't as green as regular bikes! What should the chinese do? Never advance? Live in the dark because any electricity they use has to come from somewhere? Why are we slamming them for their comparitivly small energy use instead of slamming ourselves for writting these comments on energy guzzling computers?

      --HC

      --
      So I'm jump'n up and down screaming show me the money.
    7. Re:Language at the site by AmericanInKiev · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I drive an e-bike to work.

      I'm quite happy with it.

      I find it to be a marked improvement on the pedal only model - appropriate for my less energetic mid-life self.

      Proper paths in which biking were safe combined with access to mass transportation would i think may transportation a community event (think train station as the quientessential town hall of the industrial revolution)

      Details - Good bike in the States will set you back $1100. Giant Lite is (a) leader stateside.

      There are two modes (Throttle and Pedal assist)

      Throttled is less appropriate for kids and pedestrian places.

      Pedal Assist is impossibly easy to control since it only amplifies the pedal movements.

      Mine is the latter.

      Here's wishing for a little more speed allowance - not for me - butto reduce the impatience of the cars behind me on narrow roads.

      At this gas crunch time - we should encourage our local law to embrace this option by:

      1. Granting higher speeds (-30 MPH perhaps) -

      2. special rights of way -

      3. efforts to keep the roadside clear of glass, potholes, manhole covers, and gravel from gravel drives.

      I suggest we name them Vbikes as a means of resisting the influence of the middle east crowd.

      AIK

    8. Re:Language at the site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now they can charge your green bike with power generated by coal generators.
      For now, mass transit is still the greenest.

    9. Re:Language at the site by subtropolis · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No one said China should 'never advance'. The point being made is that these electric bikes are decidedly not 'greener' than the mechanical ones the country is known for.

      This isn't just a swipe at the editors. China has, what? 4 times the population of the US? The large increase in oil imports to that country is partly responsible for the current ~$40/Barrel oil prices (because reserves are tight). Like the US, they also burn *a lot* of coal. Unlike the US, the Chinese economy is raging right now. It is, to a large degree, propping up the economies of many others.

      There are about 30 golf courses built, or planned for, in and around Beijing alone. This is the boom many economists and traders have been talking about for years. The rest of Asia, including India, will follow. It'll be interesting, to say the least, how the Chinese deal with all that comes with a bustling commerce. Think of the shear waste that the 'first world nations' have already generated. Hopefully, the popularity of electric bikes is a sign that the path they take won't be so littered. One can hope.

      btw, I don't drive, i cycle. And i'm not typing this on a P4, either.

      --
      "Our interests are to see if we can't scale it up to something more exciting," he said.
    10. Re:Language at the site by FRiC · · Score: 1

      In most Asian languages, if you're talking about a list of items, it's always followed by an enclosure term, which when translated come out as "etc.", or "and so on".

    11. Re:Language at the site by tsa · · Score: 1

      Since the Chinese have no industrial history to speak of, they can try and develop in a more 'green' way than the western countries have done. They have the advantage of knowing what's bad for the environment, something that we had to find out the hard way. Of course everybody wants a car in China, but they can skip the first 100 years of car development and build 'clean' cars from the start. Since labour is still cheap in China getting rid of old cars can also be done in an environmentally friendly way much easier than here in the West. That is a huge advantage. Let's hope money doesn't stand too much in the way of the development of a greener, modern (as in 'westernized') China.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    12. Re:Language at the site by TheLink · · Score: 1

      What I want to know is if there's regenerative braking.

      If there is then that's really a big improvement.

      Many vehicles are terribly inefficient not because of the poor efficiency of the engines, but because all the kinetic energy is wasted when the vehicle stops. Compare actual city vs cruising mileages in practice.

      --
    13. Re:Language at the site by navegan · · Score: 1

      It will be interesting to see if fitness levels go down and weight goes up as users take to the e-bike. The benefits of a regular bike are not purely environmental. I do agree that e-bikes are a great option for those who are otherwise unable to ride, though.

      --
      ----- Vegans don't send SPAM.
    14. Re:Language at the site by navegan · · Score: 1

      I don't think having easy access to motorized vehicles makes a society inherently "more advanced". (I don't have one myself, by choice, so consider me biased). More advanced in what? Rate of motor vehicle accidents? Ahead in environmental degradation? I agree with you on one thing, though - "we" should cut back on the energy consumption.

      --
      ----- Vegans don't send SPAM.
    15. Re:Language at the site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their are a lot of other sites besides this
      one. Just to name a few from your local web search, their is
      <a href="http://www.street-sports.com">Street Sports of
      Las
      Vegas</a>, 4scooters.net, and <a
      href="http://www.vegas-scooters.com">Vegas Scooters</a>.

      Regardless of the site, the point is, if your going to post one
      site, you might as well post others as well. (Disclaimer: I am
      not affiliated with any of those site, but did post them to
      counter act the other post with one URL - a sense of fair play to
      others you might say).

    16. Re:Language at the site by txviking · · Score: 1

      Haven't I praised China for being a green revolution for a long time ....

    17. Re:Language at the site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rechargeable batteries in these (and electric cars) aren't recycleable and they are more toxic by weight than gas or oil.

      Do you want heavy metals, ie lithium etc. getting piled up even more in *your* groundwater? heh.

  2. Hybrid models by beeplet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Those look really good, especially for older people with reduced mobility (which seems to be one of their major target demographics). But what I would love to be able to buy would be some kind of hybrid model. The motor would reduce the exertion required, while being able to pedal would extend the distance you could go on a single charge.

    I didn't see anything in the posted links that said whether they were electric-only bikes or hybrid, but it does look like you can already get electric hybrid bikes: Electric Bikes Northwest. I would happily buy something like that over a car, assuming I could afford either, which isn't the case anyway...

    1. Re:Hybrid models by Ninwa · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You could also have your peddling recharge the motor, too... I think that'd be less efficient than just having the pedal act as it wold on a normal bike... definitely could use improvement.

    2. Re:Hybrid models by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For more information go here.

    3. Re:Hybrid models by HoldenCaulfield · · Score: 3, Informative

      Electric assist bikes or add-on's aren't uncommon.

      Google for more if you're interested . . .

    4. Re:Hybrid models by AmericanInKiev · · Score: 2, Informative

      You can get such a bike in your town.

      If you have an independant dealer of "Giant" Bicycles - they can special order it and hand it to you assembled.

      If you live within 10 miles of work - you can get your excerisize and arrive at work less wasted than a standard bicycle. - I do.

      Highly recommended.

      AIK

    5. Re:Hybrid models by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have a dynamo on a bicycle headlight, and let me tell you, it's a real drag when it's engaged (no pun intended.) They'll definitely have to improve the technology somewhat before that's viable.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    6. Re:Hybrid models by Awptimus+Prime · · Score: 1

      I had one of those, and yes, it was awful. As soon as it was engaged, hills became a nightmare.

      Perhaps you should invest in a battery powered system using nimh rechargable batteries? They are rather light and don't interfere with your efficiency.

    7. Re:Hybrid models by JDisk · · Score: 1

      They already have improved them: Try a modern hub-dynamo. The best one is probably the SON but Shimano also makes several models. They are at least twice as efficient as normal sidewall- or bottom-bracket dynamos. Almost no noticable drag and much more reliable, esp. in bad weather. and About the only downside is the price.

    8. Re:Hybrid models by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Use LED bulbs and get a better dynamo, that way you don't lose as much power to the dynamo for the same lighting.

      But what really would be useful would be regenerative braking.

      --
    9. Re:Hybrid models by RogerWilco · · Score: 1

      The hub dynamo is very old already, my dad's bike ('60's Raleigh Superbe) has one, the dynohub, it just never became very popular for some reason.
      google found some info on: http://sheldonbrown.com/dynohubs.html

      --
      RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
    10. Re:Hybrid models by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're anywhere near an Aprilia dealership (motorcycles), you can get the Aprilia Enjoy. it's a hybrid mountain bike. A bit pricey, though.

  3. Who woulda thunk it? by BorkBorkBork6000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course China is paving the way for green transportation. Having enormous populations in congested cities with low average incomes is a great motivation to produce cheap transportation.

    1. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Actually, this is a big step backwards from previous usage, where they just used normal, human-powered bikes. Those have no batteries to manufacture or dispose of, and don't consume the extra energy to move heavy batteries around.

      This development is anti-green.

      "Green", of course, is best achieved when humans live is as much poverty as you think you can smuggle past your audience, labeled as noble sacrifice if need be; better yet, just have all the humans die.

    2. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Whyte · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sure the bike doesn't produce much in the way of pollutants, but how about the electricity source used to charge the bike's batteries? This type of "green" transportation is nothing more than passing the buck due to most power stations burning fossil fuels.

      Unless you tell me they are ALL using portable solar power generators to do it.

      --
      -- No matter how great your triumphs or how tragic your defeats, approximately one billion Chinese couldn't care less.
    3. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Metallic+Matty · · Score: 1

      I concur, this isn't really "green" in any way compared to regular bicycles.

      However, its all relative. This is a better solution than a car, that's for sure.

    4. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by BorkBorkBork6000 · · Score: 1

      That's true, the energy isn't free.

      But a power plant, even a coal-powered one, is far more efficient than a gas engine, especially the older engines typical in China.

    5. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, "green" is relative. In this case we're trading an extra helping of rice for a tank of gas or a battery recharge. Power has to come *somewhere*, if not from oil.

    6. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Fafner · · Score: 1

      My first thought exactly. Replacing ordinary bikes with those ugly ones isn't exactly a green move.

    7. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Whyte · · Score: 1

      That argument is also predicated on China using the latest and greatest technology for burning coal... which I doubt is the case. Especially when considering that China doesn't have much in the way of industrial emmission laws. Agrigate unites of pollution per person could be alot more equal than you think.

      But this is irrelevant. These e-bike are simply not "green" devices when compared to what they replaced.... biologically (read: human) powered bicycles.

      --
      -- No matter how great your triumphs or how tragic your defeats, approximately one billion Chinese couldn't care less.
    8. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The first part of your comment is right on, but the second half is just an extremely black and white view that doesn't stand up to the light of day. Lets take for example, USA and China. Chinese have quite a bit less than Americans, yet China is much more polluted.

      Technological advances sometimes bring bad along with the good they were designed for, but when we keep at it, we can often fix those problems and just keep the good. The solution to many of our problems caused by technology isn't going to be fixed by getting rid of the technology, but by improving it.

    9. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      Even if you're just passing the buck, at least the sources of the pollution can be moved away from population centers. That's a major step towards improved help.

      Changing the overall energy source to something green doesn't happen immediately. But in the mean time, you can still move pollution generation away from the major cities.

      Hydrogen-powered and electric-powered vehicles aid that.

    10. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by timeOday · · Score: 1

      The bikes weigh, what, 80 lbs? A Honda Civic is 2500 lbs, a Hummer H2 is 6400 lbs. Let's not begrudge the Chinese a vehicle that probably gets the equivalent of 100 mpg.

    11. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      This type of "green" transportation is nothing more than passing the buck due to most power stations burning fossil fuels.

      Nah. They'll just put another turbine into the Three Gorges Dam.

      --
      What?
    12. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by glenalec · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Point one - China is also the world leader in solar energy. (As an Australian, I hang my head in shame).

      Point two - point one notwithstanding, China gets most of its eletrical power ATM off brown-coal (very high sulfur content) which is why in Beijing you really can feel the air burning the the inside of your nostrils on a bad day.

      On the local (ie Chinese) news last night, big stories on several chanels about China's eletrical power shortage, with factories having to only run night shifts, cancel big orders and subsequently lay off workers because they don't have the power to operate their machinery. I don't have exact figures at hand, but I believe well over half the population is yet to be connected to the grid.

      Chinese diet is becoming westernised and obesity is starting to become common in the population.

      A human-powered bicycle starts to look better again. But mainland Chinese are very physical-effort adverse as breaking a sweat is considered 'workerish'. Really! (This is, of course, a gross generalisation and all of my own Chinese friends here are exceptions).

      And all that hard breathing of Beijing (or Shanghai, or any city, really) air probably does more health damage than two packs a day. I doubt it is coincidence that major respitary illnesses come out of this part of the world mostly, what with the pollution, the dense population and everyone spitting like lamas everywhere!

      My unit leader was saying the other day that when he was a boy there was spring and autumn (fall) in this region but there isn't anymore. And if you can see Venus on a 'clear' night, you are going well!

      A bit ecclectic above, sorry, I'm in a rush to catch the university bus into the city for weekend grocery shopping.

      --
      The man with no surname and a silly hat

      On the universe: It's bunk.
    13. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't know what you are talking about, typical for an eco terrorist. I lived in China back in 92 and the air pollution mainly comes from, coal fired stoves, the burning of crops, after harvest, and leaves in the city. You have to get to the rust belt of China before you start seeing industrial pollution.

      And don't think that everybody rides a bicycle in China. Bei Jing has the worst traffic I have ever seen.

    14. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2, Informative
      But this is irrelevant. These e-bike are simply not "green" devices when compared to what they replaced.... biologically (read: human) powered bicycles.

      I don't think that you can make that claim without further analysis. A typical human riding a bike produces ~0.3 HP (~250 W). An electrically powered bike going the same speed would use a similar amount of energy. (Compare this to a car that might use 20 HP to sustain highway speeds; the bike would be more than 60X more efficient.)

      At any rate, the electric bike indirectly uses coal, which is bad, but at only a tiny fraction of the rate that a car uses petroleum. On the other hand, the human demands extremely high-grade fuel: food. The environmental impact of creating a given amount of energy in the form of edible food can be significantly higher than mining that same energy in fossil fuels. In fact, depending on the type of food (especially if it's meat), producing food with one joule of chemical energy can consume many joules of fossil fuels (for fertilizer, transportation, processing, etc.). Deforestation, soil erosion, and pesticide pollution are other issues to consider.

      Although riding bicycles is clearly more "green" than driving a car, human powered vs. electric may be more of a complex tradeoff than it would seem at first glance.

    15. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Of course China will lead the way in "green" transportation. Actually they already did. If you've been to China in the 80s you'd find the cities all crawling with bicycles (I haven't been there since so I don't really know what the streets are like now). In fact, you can even see this as a step backwards from human-powered transportation (what can be more green than that?), to electric-powered ones, which most probably involves the burning of fossil fuels to generate the electricity. But with China damming up the Three Gorges for hydro power I think they are still "green".

      It has nothing with being "green" or not. This is just a wonderful way of getting around without pumping your legs too hard as you get around in a city where bicycles are common modes of transportation.

    16. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 5, Insightful
      "Green", of course, is best achieved when humans live is as much poverty as you think you can smuggle past your audience, labeled as noble sacrifice if need be

      Bullshit. Poverty is bad for the environment, since it is a strong inducement to make choices that are cheap in the short-term but expensive in the long run.

      No, conspicuous consumption is not green. But being against the waste of resources, especially in pursuit of empty promises of happiness by owning more stuff, doesn't make one in favor of poverty and suffering - any more than being against overeating makes one in favor of starvation.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    17. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      These e-bike are simply not "green" devices when compared to what they replaced.... biologically (read: human) powered bicycles.

      Are they replacing bicycles more than they are replacing gas-powered scooters? If nine bicyclists switch to e-bikes, does one scooter-driver switching outweigh that? I dunno.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    18. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by crem_d_genes · · Score: 1

      China's economy is growing exponentially at a rate of about 7% a year - That's a doubling time of about ten years.

      It's now estimated that China will require about 80% of the world's oil exports by 2015 if this trend is continued.

    19. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by dlakelan · · Score: 3, Informative

      You have to consider the MARGINAL food requirements of a human, since the basal metabolic rate will be burned regardless of whether you're on a bike.

      Since the BMR for an adult male is approximately 2000 Kcal and riding a bike around at a comfortable pace for 2 hours a day on flat ground costs maybe 250 Kcal according to the data quoted above, what we're talking about is a 13% increase in food consumption. Since healthier people are generally lighter weight and happier, and therefore do not overeat as much, it's possible that a person who bikes for transportation eats less total food than a person who doesn't depending on the rate of overweight people in the relevent populations.

      --
      ((lambda (x) (x x)) (lambda (x) (x x))) http://www.endpointcomputing.com a scientific approach to custom computing.
    20. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by gujo-odori · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There is nothing insightful about that post, it's just ignorant.

      I lived in SE Asia, and I can tell you that the first thing that happens when people start going from poverty to prosperity is they start buying cars and scooters and things. The streets of Ho Chi Minh City are so choked with scooter traffic that if I had been riding a bicycle instead of a scooter myself, I probably would have been overcome by the exhaust fumes and collapsed (and no, I am not kidding).

      China, as you may have noticed, is becoming fairly prosperous. Now, people are going to buy faster, more comfortable modes of transportation than bicycles. Which would you rather have them buy? Electric-assist bicycles, which are still pretty green and whose batteries can be recycled (and I'm sure they are; a lot of stuff from the G-7 gets sent to China for recycling, so they have a big recycling industry already in place), or would you rather have them buy a car or scooter and get around with an internal combustion engine driving a vehicle with a lot more parts in it?

      You sound like a typical radical environmentalist: calling a good thing for the environment worthless because it's not perfect. By the way, do you use a vehicle with an internal combustion engine yourself? If you do, then you're also a hypocrite for criticizing China for not being perfectly green while they are still greener than you are.

      You and the people who modded you insightful both need to get a tighter grasp on your clue before it all slips away.

    21. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
      riding a bike around at a comfortable pace for 2 hours a day on flat ground costs maybe 250 Kcal according to the data quoted above

      Actually, from dieting charts I've seen, 2 hours of biking would burn at least 1000 Kcal of food energy. (It makes sense: 250W*2h = 430Kcal; losses converting chemical to mechanical energy would account for the rest).

      However, as you point out, psychology probably plays a role. Going from not traveling to biking 2 hours per day would probably result in a person eating more. But if that person then went from pedaling the bike to electric power, he probably wouldn't cut back down on eating, just as overweight auto drivers in the U.S. haven't cut back on meals.

    22. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by tek314159 · · Score: 1
      Shanghai, in particular, has to watch out in its attempts to 'emulate the West.' It's no secret that when the Chinese government sees the mass of bikes on the streets of their cities, they think, not about how great and green the method of transportation is, but how backwards it is. They desperately want the world to see that they, too, can build big highways for commuters.

      So, as reported by Shanghai newspapers, they're moving to outlaw all two-wheeled vehicles from the city center. They cause traffic congestion, and hey - who wants all those visiting businessmen to see that people still ride around on bikes in such a busy, modern metropolis? There's been a popular outcry, but it remains to be seen whether the government backs down, or not.

    23. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by aitsu · · Score: 1
      Having enormous populations in congested cities with low average incomes is a great motivation to produce cheap transportation.

      I would just like to add, Tokyo mostly fits that description except that (a) average incomes are comparable to western levels and (b) cheap transportation is already available. Yet power-assisted bicycles have been on sale here for several years and remain very popular. Why is that? Japanese brands constitute the majority of the market but the bicycles were initially made in Japan, making them rather expensive. As Japan is a large population with a high disposable income, sales caught on to the extent that it has become economically justifiable to shift production to China. Economies of scale have thus brought unit costs down to a level that makes them affordable to the Chinese population, itself a huge consumer market with increasingly high disposable incomes. That in itself has brought further economies of scale and prices in Japan have dropped to around half of what they were 4 or 5 years ago. Now the average (Japanese) Joe can offord one of these so we keep on buying. It's basically the same as with anything that started out as a "luxury" consumer product in the Japanese market a few years ago; digital cameras, LCD TVs, you name it.

    24. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Donny+Smith · · Score: 1

      There's no reason to keep bicycles on the streets - they're too cheap and "useless".
      Imagine how many people car manufacturers employ and how much money the industry makes for the government (sales tax, upstream/downstream industries, etc.).

    25. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You sound like a typical radical environmentalist:

      No, he sounds like the braindead hippie-bashing type, pretending that anything slightly green must be evil and poverty inducing.

    26. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by BinLadenMyHero · · Score: 1

      There is nothing insightful about that post, it's just ignorant.

      Wrong. There's one right thing in the post: human power is indeed greener than batteries.

      And is also good for the health of the population.
      Not that I think that it's better for everybody, and the e-bikes are bad. They're not.

    27. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're all missing the point badly. People are replacing *bicycles* with electric bicycles, not cars. They are polluting more, not less. The sheer numbers of people moving about may make it impossible for everyone to go by car (but countless will try none-the-less) but they still have a motorized vehicle that results in pollution. When fission is available, let's talk some more.

    28. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

      I guess my problem is that I really like stuff, and I don't mind working for it, and it doesn't make me feel empty.

    29. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      I guess my problem is that I really like stuff, and I don't mind working for it, and it doesn't make me feel empty.

      It doesn't make you feel empty (though how do you feel when stuff breaks or falls apart, as all stuff does eventually?), but does it make you feel full?

      If stuff fills the void, at some point you'll have enough stuff, problem solved. (At least until the stuff falls apart.)

      If it doesn't, you're on an endless treadmill. "If getting this stuff didn't make me feel totally happy forever, then it must be that stuff that will do it." Lather, rinse, repeat.

      You can never get enough of what you really never wanted in the first place.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    30. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

      Wtf? Stuff is fun. I'm perfectly aware that the evironment was raped to create this computer I'm writing this on or my treo. But I'm also aware that I don't want to use this same computer in a year because new stuff will be out and it'll be fun to explore it and use it, and I'll be raping the environment even more by "not making do".

      We're talking about degrees here (how did you post this again?) and you're setting the bar at your level, and measuring else by it.

      Sure I could decide I don't like things that don't rape the environment, and build a garden and try to find enjoyment in stacking rocks or something. But then I'd be changing wind patterns or something... and I'd want to not use my hands, so I'd have to use a hoe, which I suppose could be wood and just rape the environment of a tree, but I'd prefer metal, and then I'd want a hoe that was of a better metal to see how if it worked better, and I'd find enjoyment in the fact that it held its edge longer and cut through roots faster... then I'd want whatever new hoe that came out that did it even better...

    31. Re:Who woulda thunk it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Which would you rather have them buy? Electric-assist bicycles... or ...a car..."

      Well, it certainly does more for the economy if they buy a car.

      Won't someone PLEASE think of the benefit to GM, BMW, Chevron-Texico, Haliburton, etc.

  4. Green Transportation? by AssProphet · · Score: 4, Funny

    in China it's RED transportation.

    1. Re:Green Transportation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's green transportation if you charge your batteries by pedaling on a stationary bike when you're home.

    2. Re:Green Transportation? by Suburbanpride · · Score: 2, Insightful

      People have already mentioned the urban planning of the China. Most chinese cities are already set up for bikes, not cars. If electric bike can help extend the distance that the average person can get on their bikes, then it will be a good thing. In america, bikes will never replace cars untill cities are built for bike traffic.

      --
      sorry 'bout the mess...
    3. Re:Green Transportation? by moreati · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Green transportation? These things definitly aren't designed to replace cars. Look at the min/max speeds! And the comparison was made with bikes, not cars.
      No they're not designed to replace cars as general pupose transporation, they're intended to be the only option other than walking, or as a supplement to a car (in a case the person can afford a car). The min/max speed is not comparable to a car on open road, but it beats the pants off anything that's sitting a traffic jam, something cars are very adept at creating, this is for urban use remember.
      What's greener, a bike powered by human-power, or a bike powered by electricity (which has to come from somewhere....fossil fuels, anyone)? I vote human-powered bikes.
      One human powered bike is greener than an electric one, but both are greener than a car, particularly in urban, stop-start traffic. If someone would choose a electric bike over a car, but a car over a normal bike, then the electric bike is greener than the car. As with most many environmental issues it is a balance between impact, hassle & motivation. Also remember the motor supplements the pedalling, it doesn't replace it. I vote electric bikes, for wide spread adoption. Alex
    4. Re:Green Transportation? by sploxx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ahh, I was sure that this "Green transportation" thing would spawn quite a few comments. But as astounding as it sounds, electricity-powered vehicles *can* be 'greener' than directly fossil-fuel powered.
      Why?

      If you consider nuclear power as a 'green' energy source, it's easy. Some do, I'm personally not sure... :)

      If you don't:
      1. A certain amount of electricity is from renewable fuels already.
      2. The energy conversion efficiency is greater in power plants (about 42%) than in combustion engines (about 25%) and the conversion efficiency of an electro motor is good (about 90%).
      3. Waste heat from power plants can be used (for efficiencies up to 60%)

      Of course, one has to throw the building energy costs for the power plant, the motor cycle etc. into the equations. And there is bio diesel...
      Oh yeah and you have to take into account the fuel logistics. And, and, ... :) Obviously, a difficult question to decide.

    5. Re:Green Transportation? by dasmegabyte · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      My brother-in-law is red-green colourblind. He can't tell the difference.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    6. Re:Green Transportation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's greener, a bike powered by human-power, or a bike powered by electricity (which has to come from somewhere....fossil fuels, anyone)? I vote human-powered bikes.

      Here we have a typical polarized-thought attitude.

      Someone presents a good middle-ground alternative, but instead of giving it some consideration, you completely shoot it down because it's not 100% conformant to your ideal.

      This is an example of the mentality that is tearing apart society today. You're either completely with us or completely against us. No room for compromise or middle ground.

    7. Re:Green Transportation? by HBI · · Score: 1

      This depends if you count in the flatulence of the rider or not, and the methane release's greenhouse effect.

      Pedaling a bike seems to do much for releasing same.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    8. Re:Green Transportation? by zakezuke · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What's greener, a bike powered by human-power, or a bike powered by electricity (which has to come from somewhere....fossil fuels, anyone)? I vote human-powered bikes.

      This would depend on where you get your engery from. Humans require engery in the form of food. Food must come from somewhere. Food requires land, soil, nutrients, in many cases livestock. Methane production of a cow for example is pretty signigent. Not to speak of the waste product of humans, which nothing to sneeze at as we are talking about a country with billions of people.

      I'm not saying you are wrong, all I'm saying it's not a clear cut equation to balance the effect on the ecosystem between the use of human power and the use of electrical power.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    9. Re:Green Transportation? by binarybum · · Score: 0

      yeah I know -1 redundant, but I feel the need to reiterate what a stupid last sentence that was.

      --
      ôó
    10. Re:Green Transportation? by adamfranco · · Score: 1

      both are greener than a car, particularly in urban, stop-start traffic.

      How much greener? See my previous post: ...The bicycle is the perfect transducer to match man's metabolic energy to the impedance of locomotion. Equipped with this tool, man outstrips the efficiency of not only all machines but all other animals as well. See link and below for numbers.

      How about the efficiency of a car? Numbers from here give 45mpg to equal to 66Cal/km:

      45m/gal = 19km/L
      with an energy density of 5.3x10^6J/L for gasoline, we get
      278947J/km = 66625cal/km = 66Cal/km

      Car: 66 Calories/km
      Walking: 0.75 Calories/km => 88x more effiecent than a car (at 45mpg)
      Biking: 0.15 Calories/km => 440x more effiecent than a car (at 45mpg)
      (note, the above assume that the numbers in the linked article for people, are in nutritional "C"alaries = kilocalories, instead of SI calories. If they are SI, then the bike is 440,000x more efficient.)

      The bike just rocks. :-)

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    11. Re:Green Transportation? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      ...regardless of power source is not as green as a regular pedal bike.

      The waste product that comes from a regular pedal bike is brown. :-)

      --
      What?
    12. Re:Green Transportation? by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Uhh, until we build a lot more nuclear
      Oh no - duck and cover! Back away from the nukes and how it may work cheaply and cleanly someday if those greenies let us build more than the in-place 1950's technology and let's just go back to talking about bicycles.

      A bike and rider with a combined weight of less than 85kg going at low speeds is going to use less energy than a small motorbike - even if you take line losses and battery efficiency into account. These things are an alternative to a conventional motorbike or a small car. If you look at them that way, as well as the pollution shifting (lots of these vehicles will not produce inner-city smog) issues they are a good idea. If you compare them to conventional bicyles, it's a different case.

      The bike is polluting, maybe hundreds of miles away, but it is still polluting.
      That's what happens in industrial societies, but it's far better to put it where it will disperse, and you can use simple pollution controls (gravity is free when you have the space to use it, water is cheap, and electrostatic precipitation is cheap when you are doing it at a power plant).
    13. Re:Green Transportation? by malarkey · · Score: 1

      here's goes:

      In Red China, bicycle pedals you.

      I'm terribly sorry for that, but it seemed to be the first appropriate version of the joke in ages.

    14. Re:Green Transportation? by rocjoe71 · · Score: 1
      If you consider nuclear power as a 'green' energy source, it's easy.

      Any by 'green' you mean the radioactive glow left behind by toxic waste? C:

      --
      Height: 38U, Weight: 0 Newtons, Eyes: #0000FF, OS: Gray Matter 1.0 (Alpha)
    15. Re:Green Transportation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not, because you need to eat more food to do that. And more food means more fuel for plantation/transportation, more packaging that goes to landfill, more quantity of your poop to dispose.

    16. Re:Green Transportation? by justin_le · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What's greener, a bike powered by human-power, or a bike powered by electricity (which has to come from somewhere....fossil fuels, anyone)? I vote human-powered bikes.

      I crunched some numbers and the answer for a typical north american diet is... electric-powered.

      In summary, it consumes about 10 calories of energy to produce, process, transport, and cook one typical calorie of food. The human body can then convert this into muscle energy with a maximum efficiency of about 25%, so the total ratio is 40 units of primary energy for 1 unit energy seen by the bicycle.

      Batteries similarly take energy to manufacture, transport, and recharge. The electric motor is usually about 75% efficient at converting the battery energy into mechanical output. Overall it works out to a total energy ratio of 4:1 - 15:1 depending on the battery chemistry, so up to 10 times more efficient than a human-powered bike (40:1).

      The details are spelt out here:

      http://www.ebikes.ca/Ebike_Energy.pdf

    17. Re:Green Transportation? by iamacat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Trading in pedal bikes for motor bikes, regardless of power source is not as green as a regular pedal bike

      Well, it is more green if it causes you to bike to more places, rather than buying a car or taking a taxi. Or if it becomes popular with middle-aged/senior people.

    18. Re:Green Transportation? by moreati · · Score: 1
      The bike just rocks. :-)


      Totally agreed.

      My point, and your point in the linked post, are that bicycles are much more efficient for urban transport than cars, as you've demonstrated. My additional point is any transportation method has zero benefit if it's not used. E-bikes are more likely to be used because of convenience; the rider can travel an average 10-15mph without the need to have a shower/change of clothes upon arriving.
    19. Re:Green Transportation? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      *No they're not designed to replace cars as general pupose transporation, they're intended to be the only option other than walking, or as a supplement to a car (in a case the person can afford a car). The min/max speed is not comparable to a car on open road, but it beats the pants off anything that's sitting a traffic jam, something cars are very adept at creating, this is for urban use remember.*

      over there, it's a replacement for a bicycle. they don't have money for a car for most parts anyways. It's a high end replacement for a regular bike.. not a low end replacement for a car.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  5. In communist China... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    electric bikes transport you!

  6. E-bikes? by metlin · · Score: 1, Troll

    What's with the name of e-bikes? They are bloody mopeds that run on battery.

    Or call them scooters that run on battery. The name e-bikes sounds cheesy, and more like a marketing ploy.

    Although, that's quite surprising, since one of the site mentions that one of the companies making it (Shenzhen Light Ind. Products I/E Co.) is owned by the govt.

    Usually it's the corporations that have the habit of coming up with and using buzzwords, surprised to see a govt. owned company using it :)

    Aren't they supposed to be *cough* beyond such things *cough* ?

    1. Re:E-bikes? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Usually it's the corporations that have the habit of coming up with and using buzzwords, surprised to see a govt. owned company using it :) Aren't they supposed to be *cough* beyond such things *cough* ?

      Are you kidding?! The Chinese government has been coming up with weird slogans and catchphrases for decades. Hell, they're known for it. "Great Leap Forward", "Achieve the Four Modernizations", "To be rich is glorious", "the Gang of Four"; it's a very buzzword-centered society.

    2. Re:E-bikes? by J.+T.+MacLeod · · Score: 1

      "Electric bicycles", probably.

      I've heard worse. Kind of like the customer that absolutely insists that the techie slang term for email is just 'e' and uses it to sound "in-the-know", no matter how many times I explain that I've never heard such.

      "Just 'e' me."
      "I'll be sure to email you, ma'am."

      I think I'm mostly desensitized to the use of 'e', though. I was surprisingly calm when I first heard of eMachines.

    3. Re:E-bikes? by martingunnarsson · · Score: 1

      I guess the e means electrical, and I can't really see any problem with the name.

      --
      Martin
    4. Re:E-bikes? by NeMon'ess · · Score: 3, Informative

      The e-bike has pedals so the rider can add power. Scooters do not have pedals, be they for children with roller blade wheels, or electric/gas models. The definition of moped: http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=moped
      sa ys it has pedals and is powered by a gas engine.

      So they're either electric bikes or electric mopeds. I think the design and appearance would be the deciding factor of what to call them.

    5. Re:E-bikes? by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 1

      I guess the e means electrical, and I can't really see any problem with the name.

      That's right. Who ever said anything about electrical-bay, electrical-thernet, electrical-business or the Jaguar electrical-type uh?

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    6. Re:E-bikes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll e you an explanation of why you're wrong if you like, what's your e address?

  7. Not green. by Meor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Generating electricity is not green. Once again this is a demonstration of euphoric environmentalists not knowing how things work.

    1. Re:Not green. by jollis · · Score: 1

      True, to some extent, but even power plants burning fossil fuels are orders of magnitude more efficient than small internal combustion engines. You also get the added benefit of mitigating city smog.

    2. Re:Not green. by Stone316 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe not but it doesn't have any emissions so in that respect it is 'green'.

      --
      "Thanks to the remote control I have the attention span of a gerbil."
    3. Re:Not green. by Teckla · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Generating electricity is not green. Once again this is a demonstration of euphoric environmentalists not knowing how things work.

      You're right, riding 30 pounds of bicycle isn't any more "green" than driving around 2000 pounds of car.

      We'll try to keep such crazy thoughts out of our head from now on.

      -Teckla

    4. Re:Not green. by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 1

      Will people stop saying this. Commecial power plants are no where near an order of magnitude more efficent then an internal combustion engine. Few commercial plants are over 40% due to safety and cost. a car is 30-40 depending on type of engine gas vs diesel. Things like coal power plants all around suck, and have piss poor emmisons.

      Nuclear and Wind is good, since it's extremely clean, thus efficiency isn't much an issue. But if you are compairing a car vs a coal powered plant, the car wins.

    5. Re:Not green. by AtomicBomb · · Score: 1

      I have read numerous comment in slashdot this morning regarding the trend is not green as the electricity-powered bike is going to replace the human powered ones...

      Yes, it is a fact. On the other hand, I don't think people will say the use of public transport like train/bus is not green. People can always walk, but, when the city gets larger, some form of transport is neccessary. In Mao's days, it was "revolutionary" to act and look like a proletariat. You should not care about the appearance that much. Arriving work sweaty is acceptable. For urban white collar Chinese workers nowadays, I don't think it is (will be) the norm...

      Then, what are the available solutions? Public transport is alway one. To determine whether e-bike is a environmentally sensible solution, we got to compare e-bike with vehicle, rather than walking. According to London Cycling Campagin, the typical power consumption (for electric-assist bike) is 100 to 150 watts, compared with about 15000 watts for a car. In other words, a typical car trip can power 100s of e-bike trip. My gut feeling is it is more efficent than bus (a bus take about 100 passenger, but I think it burns more fuel than car)... Plus, the biker can still get a bit of exercise. So, what else are you asking for?

    6. Re:Not green. by MagFox · · Score: 1

      They are replacing human-powered bikes, not cars.

    7. Re:Not green. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My impression from the many regular cyclists I know both on- and offline is that they consider electric bikes unnecessary, un-fun, and better suited to the elderly and disabled than to ordinary riders. I think that only a small number of riders who are willing to commute by bicycle at all would be inclined to switch to an electric bike.

      It may be largely walkers or transit riders who opt to go instead by electric bike, but it's not serious cyclists as far as I can tell; not here in bike-crazy Seattle anyway.

  8. Green Transportation? by nate+nice · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?"

    Trading in pedal bikes for motor bikes, regardless of power source is not as green as a regular pedal bike. Also, since this is "green" I guess, I would imagine countries like China would adopt them first as there isn't any room for American style SUV's, right?

    --
    "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
  9. Re:BSD's new hot chick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good ole Ceren. I wonder what she's doing these days...

  10. It's not that hard to assume... by CoconutFoobar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unlike most places in the US, many Chinese cities do not have streets made for large amounts of vehicular traffic, so bicycles have become important to them. Then, when you consider the cost of gasoline compared to the average Chinese person's salary, what's so bad about electric bikes? Besides, in a country of a billion people, if only 10% of people use this technology, that's more electric bikes sold than all the cars sold in the US. (Plus no required age to use one).

    1. Re:It's not that hard to assume... by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Plus no required age to use one

      Well, I can give you a few reasons why this will never work over here in the Netherlands.

      • There will be a minimum age of 16.
      • Helmet would be required.
      • Bikes would cost 250 euro due to massive taxes.
      • Special permit required ( 150 euro ), takes 3 months, one theoretical exam ( 150 euro ) and one practical exam. ( 250 euro )
      • It would get stolen withing a day.

      Here's to the goverment overregulating crap. Cheers.

    2. Re:It's not that hard to assume... by RogerWilco · · Score: 1

      I do not agree with you, (except for your last reason ;-)

      These could be ridden by everyone in the Netherlands. With a maximum speed of 20 km/h they do not fall into the regulated category.

      --
      RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
  11. Green Transportation? by jonman_d · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Green transportation? These things definitly aren't designed to replace cars. Look at the min/max speeds! And the comparison was made with bikes, not cars.

    What's greener, a bike powered by human-power, or a bike powered by electricity (which has to come from somewhere....fossil fuels, anyone)? I vote human-powered bikes.

  12. Stigma by mphase · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When I first came across this technology years ago I wondered why it didn't seem to very popular. I soon realized that here in America nobody would ride one of these because of the social implications. Your either such a lazy fat bastard that you need a motor on your bike or your too weak and pathetic to just ride a normal bike or your a broke looser who can't afford a motorcycle or car. Who is gonna ride even a good electric bike (which even now there are few of) with these sort of implications attached.

    1. Re:Stigma by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mainly, you're gay. Even without the electric bike.

    2. Re:Stigma by bmonreal · · Score: 2, Informative
      I used to commute on an electric-assisted bike. I'd use the motor for a burst of acceleration out of stoplights, or up short hills. My legs did most of the work overall, but with the quick acceleration I could keep up with city traffic. I could take up a lane and behave more or less like a car.


      It was great.

    3. Re:Stigma by CoconutFoobar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your either such a lazy fat bastard that you need a motor on your bike or your too weak and pathetic to just ride a normal bike or your a broke looser who can't afford a motorcycle or car.

      It's not just that, but most of the US is very bike-unfriendly. With the exception of California, you either have to fight with pedestrians on the sidewalk, or try your luck in traffic (also depending on local laws).

      It's amazing how many drivers almost hit me when I'm riding around on my bicycle. It's not that they're trying to hit me, it's a question of riding in the middle of the street, slowing traffic, or ride along the side and be close to being run off the road/clipped.

    4. Re:Stigma by Jonathan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's amazing how many drivers almost hit me when I'm riding around on my bicycle

      On the other hand, as a pedestrian (when I'm not taking public transit), it's amazing how many bicyclists on sidewalks act rather similar to us as you describe cars acting to you...

    5. Re:Stigma by zakezuke · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I wondered why it didn't seem to very popular. I soon realized that here in America nobody would ride one of these because of the social implications.

      While I'm not about to discount the social implications of riding an electric bike... but let's not discount the safety implications of riding a bike in general in the USA. Frankly in most of the areas i've lived, it's not exactly safe. You *could* ride on the sidewalk, but the rules of the road state that bikes belong on the street. Streets are often not geared tward bicycle traffic, let alone pedestrian traffic. Downtown areas you must play the game of dodging the parked cars and prevent from being hit by rear-comming cars crussing at speeds 25mph+. Major arterials are also not exactly safe either. Nicer ones have sholders or provisions for pedestrian traffic, others have no sholder what so ever. Users in cars get most angry when they can't pass you.

      Some cities are smart enough to actually retrofit bike lanes, and put in sidewalks. Perhaps they finally noticed that people under the age of 16 need to get from point A to point B without getting hit by cars. From what I've observed, this is rather an exception to the rule. America thinks in terms of cars and not people.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    6. Re:Stigma by adamfranco · · Score: 1

      It was great.

      Even better, with a slight downhill I can sprint at about 30-35 on my road bike. Just hop on the center line and blow by traffic!*

      * This is in no way safe and is not recommended practice. Damn is it a rush though!

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    7. Re:Stigma by bill0755 · · Score: 1
      People would ride one of these if practical considerations outweighed concern with social status. Or in a society where being practical was considered cool.

      The practical problem with sharing the road with automobiles is that in the event of an accident, the car driver has little injury risk. This fact gives uneven encouragement for safe and courteous sharing.

      During the 90's in the Los Angeles area, when bicycle riding was being encouraged to help alleviate pollution and traffic congestion, a billboard campaign reminded drivers

      "Hit a Biker - Go To Jail"

      It was amazing how accomodating drivers became with a little encouragement.

    8. Re:Stigma by tftp · · Score: 1
      With the exception of California, you either have to fight with pedestrians on the sidewalk, or try your luck in traffic (also depending on local laws).

      Don't worry, you have to try your luck even in CA.

    9. Re:Stigma by silentbozo · · Score: 1

      I just finished riding back from an afternoon tea in Santa Monica, CA, and was amazed at how bike friendly that the city had gotten. It was fairly bike friendly before, with bike lanes everywhere, but it looks like they've recently started introducing these oversized corner curbs that cut off a portion of the rightmost lane at the intersection, leaving just enough room for a bike, but not a car. The nice thing about this is that it promotes using the rightmost lane for parking, while leaving enough room for bikes, AND not allowing cars to pass on the right - a big plus if you're on a bicycle in traffic and the guy behind you isn't signalling, but intends to turn in your lane anyways.

      Another interesting thing I noticed is that they've started reserving whole lanes for buses only in Downtown Santa Monica. If only Los Angeles was this progressive - although it's a damn sight more pedestrian/bicycle friendly than some of the outlying housing developments where everything is car-only, and there aren't any sidewalks.

    10. Re:Stigma by AmericanInKiev · · Score: 1

      This is a fair observation - in defense nonetheless of bicycles - the consequences of full frontal impact by a bicycle would probably make you late to work.

      The same thing by a car and you may never work again.

      The Ebike is the way out of the SUV arms (my car would crush your car in a collision) race.

      AIK

    11. Re:Stigma by AmericanInKiev · · Score: 1

      The solution to this ironically - is to give e-bikes slightly MORE Power.

      A Bike that gets to 30 Mph can hold a lane without compromise - and fit INTO existing traffic pattermns - reducing the requirement to pave special paths for bikes.

      AIK

    12. Re:Stigma by mikeboone · · Score: 1

      Most of the cities/towns I've been in the southeast and midwest would not work well for bikes. There are very few biking lanes or paths, and the regular roads are congested with traffic. It just doesn't feel safe to ride with that traffic.

      I wish my town was more accomodating to bikes...I'd be happy to ride some of the time.

    13. Re:Stigma by avida · · Score: 1

      Corrected as "You're either such a lazy fat bastard...". Your welcome.

    14. Re:Stigma by ash · · Score: 1

      The cycling option isn't helped by the portion of the cycling population who follow traffic laws only when convenient for them.

      I live in CA and several of the guys in my office bike to work. I've seen them on the road and they follow the law. However, I hear them complain and regularly see other cyclists alternately following traffic law, pedestrian law, or no law whatsoever. For example, this week I saw a cyclist get into the left lane behind some other cars and the light turned red. Instead of acting like a vehicle and waiting out the light, he pulled around the cars, swerved into the crosswalk and used it, then the next crosswalk, to make a left, all against the lights (both traffic & pedestrian). Would this be tolerated if it was done by a car, or even motorcycle? But on a bike, it's commonplace.

      With a portion of the population haphazardly following laws, and seemingly little police enforcement (I've never seen one of the 100s of Mountain View police pull over a bike), anyone riding in a car, looking out the window considering a bike is much less likely to make the transition when they see cyclists dodging through traffic and hopping curbs, 250lb unarmored ants among 3000lb sport utility vehicles.

  13. green? by mesmartyoudumb · · Score: 1, Insightful

    How is this green? That electricity doesn generate its self.

    --
    "Comedy's a dead art form. Now tragedy, that's funny."
    1. Re:green? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, the power must come from someplace (likely the electric grid), but you're only using enough power to get you and the bike where you're going, instead of enough power to get you and two-tons of SUV--still a savings.

  14. That's not necessarily GREEN transportation by YetAnotherName · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Unless most of the electricity comes from non-polluting sources, recharging electric bikes is going to produce more pollution than exhaling some carbon dioxide and using muscle power.

    1. Re:That's not necessarily GREEN transportation by sploxx · · Score: 1

      IMHO, this is not so clear. You have to take into account that processing the food you ate as the energy source for bicycling also costs fossil fuels.
      Although I think you can safely count yourself to the 'green' side if you carefully select what you eat, a unconvicable carnivore could maybe exceed the amount of fuels needed to power the electro-bike with the amount to process his/her meat. Maybe. I didn't do the calculations here, but one has to be at least careful.

  15. Green Transportation by Jameth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, finally China is making strides towards more pollutive transportation.

    After many long years of primarily using bikes, they are now charging these bikes with power from coal power plants. Once a billion or so people have these, our green goals will finally be completed and mother nature will be thoroughly defeated.

    1. Re:Green Transportation by Poeir · · Score: 5, Funny

      Oh, Mother Nature needs a favor? Well, maybe she should have thought of that when she was besetting us with droughts and floods and poison monkeys! Nature started the fight for survival and now she wants to quit because she's losing? Well, I say hard cheese!

      --
      Sigs are like bumper stickers.
    2. Re:Green Transportation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gaia defeated? Oh booohooo. Just what the cobra-tooth ebola_spewing bitch deserves.

    3. Re:Green Transportation by THotze · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're right about a lot of your points... all of it, in fact, but the question is always, not where does it begin, but, where does it end?

      I used to live in Beijing, eons ago by Beijing's standards, in the late 80's and early 90's. Beijing's growth might have very well outpaced the Internet's. But when I was there, we had a lot of white furnature, and a housekeeper to keep it clean... one day she was sick following her weekend... the white furnature was BLACK with soot. I honestly don't know if things have gotten better or worse, but I'd suspect that they've gotten worse. China's economy is still coal powered.

      The interesting question is who's buying these bikes, why, and what cultural impact they'll have. As pointed out before, its probalby people that are jsut starting to see wage growth, meaning that they're getting e-bikes to replace the human-powered variety, and that these require more electricity, which requires more coal, etc.

      But bikes had long been part of Chinese culture. More than just being a mode of cheap, fast transportation, they were handy. They're easy to secure, they can fit in small places to store. it means that building planners didn't need to accommodate big garages and parking spaces, useful when you've got such density as there is along the coastal regions of China and inland to Beijing, where most economic growth is taking place (and therefore, where people are more likely to have money for e-bikes).

      in this context, the shift from bikes to e-bikes is a small one, as they meet all of the conveniences of bikes without any major new hastles. (Most consumers, anywhere, have yet to make the 'big picture' association of energy usage == pollution == hastle for everyone, including me.) Now, this means that it postpones the growth of large numbers of cars for a while as people get these instead, perhaps delaying any shift to (as many) big garages, parking lots, etc.

      That way, it could be a good thing. RIGHT NOW, its true that it looks like these e-bikes are just a stepping stone to bigger cars... but what if the 'e-bike' phase lasts 20-30 years, as it very well might? By this time, perhaps cars won't seem as desirable, or at the very least, will be less polluting. Additionally, coal plants can be MUCH less polluting with proper design/retrofitting than you'd expect. There was SOME evidence, of which there has been a partial refutation, that its possible to reduce CO2 emissions to almost nothing with a highly efficient deisgn and a method (using some sort of ceramic device??? can anyone inform?). In this way, perhaps China could be one of the first nations to benefit from economic growth without all of the eventual environmenal hastle. If China were to pollute at say, North America's levels, the planet'd get baked like a garage band on a lazy Saturday night, and that'd hurt the Chinese economy both directly and indirectly. I'd say that within the next 10-15 years, China will start retrofitting existing plants to pollute less. This is especially true as they start to get a skilled labour force that hates pollution and is costly to replace when they die young from inhaling half a kilo of coal dust every day. Not that the massive growth of Chinese cigarette sales is helping that any.

      This *might* turn out to be an indicental step that prevents it, by postponing the onset of cars and keeping the 'bicycle culture', even if its currently powered by polluting coal plants.

      Sometimes, we get lucky, unintended breaks. This could be one.

    4. Re:Green Transportation by bitflip · · Score: 1

      I was in Shanghai for a few weeks last year.

      The roads are in no condition to handle much more traffic. As it was, _I_ was wanting a bicycle. The way I see it, in five years the only thing a car will get you is air conditioning.

      Another note, about coal-powered plants v. cars and their pollution. It is far easier to update a few dozen plants than it is to update a few million vehicles.

    5. Re:Green Transportation by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

      Clearly these are more of a problem than cars in North America.

      While we have a public transportation system and infrastructure that should actually be able to you know accomplish something.

    6. Re:Green Transportation by carlislematthew · · Score: 1
      When humans arrived on this earth it was a total mess. There was this black, yukky stuff all over the place just *leaking* from the ground. They called it "oil" and discovered that they could use it for power!

      Sure, we might be creating a mess with all the CO2, smog, and other pollutants, but just *think* what the earth would be like if we didn't clean up all this crazy leaking oil! I heard that Alaska is getting messy of late - so glad Bush proposed going there to scoop it up all up.

  16. Re:BSD's new hot chick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From what I hear she's eating too much. Quite the fatty lately. She's also aparently nailing Tron Guy.

  17. Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?

    Not surprising. Now I would have definitely been surprised if the United States were the one leading the way in green transportation.

    1. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Duh! Electric scooters are for losers. America is leading the way in kick ass transportation. Without at least 8 cylinders, you might as well be a well, a eunuch! ha ha ha!

      That was satire!

    2. Re:Not surprising by evfan · · Score: 1

      Agreed! This is not an accident. It is not surprising to me as two years ago, on a trip through Bejing, I was informed that it is public policy to encourage electric bikes, scooters, and other light vehicles so that an aging population now using bicycles will not switch to gasoline vehicles. It is estimated that over ten years, instead of five time the automobiles then present they will have 2 to 2.5 times as many.

    3. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well duh! How the fuck are you supposed to mount the kerb in a 3 ton vehicle without V8 torque and 4x4 drive? It's impossible!

  18. leading green transportation? hardly.. by Scott · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As electric bicycles aren't exactly what China needs at the moment, seeing as they need, you know, electricity. Most of China's electrical power is generated from coal in factories which have pollution controls making the U.S. coal factories look impeccably clean. Along with this the Chinese are becoming just as car crazy as us wacky Americans only once again to fuel their 8% annual economic increase they have instituted almost zero pollution control laws. Those shiny cars they drive may look modern but most are 20+ years behind when it comes to emissions; just take a look at the haze over Shanghai, it's like Los Angeles circa 1990. At their current rate China will overtake the U.S. as the World's leading emitter of greenhouse gases in a relatively short amount of time.

    So like I said, not exactly leading the green revolution.

  19. Hardly new, but interesting. by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's funny to see how this craze is taking off in China only now... since these things have existed for ages. Also interesting to think about why these bikes haven't become popular in the Netherlands, another bike-loving country.Sparta has been selling powered bikes for years, with either an electric motor or a small gasoline-powered one.

    Then again, I can understand why they aren't popular here. Firstly, there's the price tag of EUR 1750 (Look on the site under "Collectie / Electrische fiets"). Secondly... crime statistics teach us that every bike owner has his bike stolen, on average, once a year in this country. And this bike would make a particularly juicy target for thieves.

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    1. Re:Hardly new, but interesting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      ... this bike would make a particularly juicy target for thieves.

      That's a great point. Perhaps someone should invent a quick-release motor so you can take it with you when you need to leave your bike outside... Erm, I'm only half-kidding too... ;)

  20. Open Your Eyes by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

    Funny, people here understand that the electric bikes in china are not really a green technology ... the electricity has to come from somewhere ...

    but so few understand that the same problems exist, and may be even worse for the Hydrogen Economy.

    --
    George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    1. Re:Open Your Eyes by Bender+Unit+22 · · Score: 1

      No, but it helps the air quality in the city which is really bad in some places.

    2. Re:Open Your Eyes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes we know about hydrogen fuel cells. Imagine them as a battery, a way to store electricity. The suggestions are to use solar panels, wind, and so forth for the electricity.

      The fossil fuel companies will say electricity for hydrogen fuel cells will come from oil/gas/coal which will create more pollution so why bother using hydrogen at all just keep paying them. They fund scientific studies to say this, omitting the idea of generating electricity from non pollution ways.

      Don't hit the branches of pollution, strike the root.

    3. Re:Open Your Eyes by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      Actually, it was Dubya that said that the hydrogen would be generated by burning oil and coal.

      Anywho, I'm glad to see that the chinese peasants will have clean air to breath on their electric bikes while they ride to work ... creating unbelievable toxic disasters salvaging metals from our thrown out computer parts.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
  21. Re:BSD's new hot chick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's GROSS

  22. Electric bikes != green transportation by caseih · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Electric vehicles are all fine and good, except that until we have a good clean source of electricity, a proliferation of electric-powered vehicles will actually increase air polution. For example, in Alberta Canada, a study was done to determine the effects on the environment of government-mandated electric cars. The study found the air pollution would increase dramatically as all of Alberta's power plants (well most of them) are coal-fire plants.

    This is not to say it's not a good thing but it's certainly not a panacea at this point. Something else to remember is that internal combustion does not necessarily equal bad since practically all energy generation involves combustion in some form or another. For example, burning natural oils (vegatable oil) is environmentally neutral, since there is no net-increase of carbon in the atmosphere (which means no green-house effects).

    The problem is that most alternative fuels such as hydrogen and methane come from burning fossil fuels. Although they burn clean in our engines, they've already caused pollution before we even get them in our cars! This fact combined with the fact that alternative fuels simply don't have as many joules of energy per unit as conventional fuels makes alternative fuels less attractive.

    If we can get a cleans supply of electricity (from the sun, for example), then all of my points become moot.

    1. Re:Electric bikes != green transportation by bani · · Score: 1

      hydroelectric is somewhat more reliable than solar energy.

    2. Re:Electric bikes != green transportation by Jardine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      hydroelectric is somewhat more reliable than solar energy.

      Yes it is, in places that have nice rivers, fast streams, waterfalls, and other good things you can dam up. Ontario has quite a few hydro-electric plants, but we still depend on other methods of generating electricity.

      I don't think Arizona or Nevada will be likely to use hydro as their main source of power in the near future.

    3. Re:Electric bikes != green transportation by adamfranco · · Score: 1

      The big, BIG, difference with using electric vehicles is that those coal-fired power plants are highly localized sources of pollution. This is even more true for nuclear power.

      By concentrating the pollution at a power plant, everyone's efficiency/pollution control can be improved by upgrading the power plant. High-tech scrubbers and other polution-reducing measures work great on power-plants, but not on small, bouncy, cars.

      Additionally, gasoline engines just aren't all that efficient compared to power plants. First of all, power generation efficiency goes way up with size. Secondly, the car's engine needs to be able to supply power for a wide range of demands, cruising => acceleration, and is rarely at its most efficient point. The power plant in contrast has very slowly cycling energy loads that its engineers can tune for via putting more or less turbines/boilers/fuel on line.

      No, electric is not a panacea, but removing the combustion from the vehicle goes a long way toward making the whole energy cycle more efficient.

      Even better, trains. :-)
      If only we had them in the US outside of the DC-NYC-Boston corridor...

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    4. Re:Electric bikes != green transportation by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      I don't think Arizona or Nevada will be likely to use hydro as their main source of power in the near future.

      Not the main source, but perhaps you heard of a little thing called Hoover Dam

    5. Re:Electric bikes != green transportation by ncc74656 · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      I don't think Arizona or Nevada will be likely to use hydro as their main source of power in the near future.

      Not the main source, but perhaps you heard of a little thing called Hoover Dam

      FWIW, most of the power generated by Hoover Dam goes to California, just as the lion's share of the Colorado River water goes to California. (The agreements WRT distribution of river resources haven't been revised in decades and were drawn up when Arizona and Nevada (especially Phoenix and Las Vegas) weren't nearly as populated as they are now.)

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    6. Re:Electric bikes != green transportation by Yazheirx · · Score: 1

      Arizona diverts a large amount of water from the Colorodo River. The Central Arizona Project (CAP) diverts water from the Colorodo through Phoenix and Tucson. It delivers 1.5 million acre feet of water per year. And that is not at full capacity.

      --
      More of my thoughts
    7. Re:Electric bikes != green transportation by meridian · · Score: 1

      Hydro electric power systems generate VERY LITTLE electricity. My Dad who just retired has been operating the head control systems on NSW in Australia for most of his life. He told me that the coal generators which cost much less to build (there are something like 10 or so in NSW from memory) produce more than 98% of the states electricity while the single hydroelectric generator produces less than 2% or so. The "great" thing about hydroelectricity is that it is easy to turn on and off the regulate the flow of electricty while the coal generators are either increased or decreased to handle the greater load. The NSW Snowy System scheme is used to regulate not only the electricty in NSW but also other states such as South Australia, Victoria and I think also Queensland but not to sure about QLD. Anyways hydro electriciy isnt going to save us. It is majorly damaging to the environments and really doesnt produce much.

      --
      meridian at tha.net
    8. Re:Electric bikes != green transportation by ces · · Score: 1

      Hydro doesn't produce much? WTF?

      Something like 20% of the power in the US comes from hydro sources. Considering just how much power the US uses per day this is a pretty damn (no pun intended) big number.

      The Grand Coulee Dam in Washington State alone is capable of generating 6,809,000 kW at peak output.

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
  23. I don't think.... by psychokid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    i don't think the electric bike is driven by a desire for green transportation, but it just happens that the particular form of transportation is desireable compared to a standard bicycle, and considerably cheaper than alternative forms of "private" transportation in that country. The average motor vehicle is still considerably expensive for the average chinese urbanite. (let's not even consider the rural economy here). Besides, as a person pointed out in an earlier post, the electric bikes are only as effective as the power plants that produce the electricity. In china, a large portion of air pollution is still sourced from coal burning used for power production. china needs to improve the efficency and conditions of it's plants before the use of electricity is considered green.

  24. Crazy Bike Drivers by btakita · · Score: 1

    When I visited Guangzhou (Canton), these bikes where everywhere. There where also alot of crazy drivers.

    I remember our tour bus almost hitting a couple of bike drivers because they cut off the bus.

    Not that I blame the bike drivers, because nobody really follows western traffic conventions there. Its pretty much, drive on any side of the street you want and create your own lanes.

    Outside a buddhist temple, I also noticed a newspaper posted on the wall with the picture of a bike driver on the pavement in a pool of blood.

  25. Who would have guessed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?
    Probably anyone with a clue about China. The cities have always been far too congested to make the automobile useful. Bicycles and feet have been the premier mode of transport there for umpteen years. In the rural regions where it's not congested, most people just can't afford an car, so they ride... bicycles. The pollution in China is predominantly from industry, and energy, not transportation. If anything, these electric bikes will make things worse, because there will be increased demand for electricity, which is generated there by highly polluting coal-burning plants.

  26. uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Well with 1.2 billion people you can't get enough oil for all that and besides the US has basically staked out the middle east as it's own supply recently so...

    But they do have 3 Gorges Dam wich produce enough electricity for 5% of all world power needs, so electricity they have, oil they do not.

    Sounds like a good plan for them.

    The US has too much stake in the oil industry, it's all bogged down in it. They'll be driving gas cars until the last drop is gone.

    The 21st century is going to see the world power center moving east to some kind of India-Japan-China axis with Korea and Vietnam as secondaries.

  27. Gas Powered Scooters EVERYWHERE by erth · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Has anyone else seen a hug increase in gas powered scooters around their neighborhood? They seem to be getting more popular than skateboards for kids now.

    I'm a little worried about kids without licenses driving motorized vehicles around on sidewalks, though they could be safer than those segways that would just tip over if the battery ran out going up a hill :)

    A friend of mine who works for a city transportation planning organization and I were discussing tha they are scrambling to draw up some regulation on these things.

    1. Re:Gas Powered Scooters EVERYWHERE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      In Finland you need to have a license to drive one. You drive them on the same roads as cars drive, so you're required to pass theory exams and a test that shows that you can handle the bike. Ofcourse they also have a max speed set to them, and you are not allowed to take them onto freeways.

    2. Re:Gas Powered Scooters EVERYWHERE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are already considered full-on motor vehicles in California. Just that the law is rarely enforced...

      C.V.C. 21221, if you're really bored.

      [S]

    3. Re:Gas Powered Scooters EVERYWHERE by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      Motorized scooters? Yes, I did notice the latest expansion in the overall resounding parenting failure in America.

      I'm not a harsh man in general, but I admit to a certain sense of smugness as I wait for one of these little miscreants to get smeared across an intersection that they failed to stop for.

      Their parents are complete morons. You don't hand a motorized scooter to a 12-year-old and then turn your back. That is, you don't do it and then expect to NOT hear a sickening {crunch} sound.

      I'd say this was Darwinism in action, but the parents are the truly deserving population and they will not have to pay the ultimate price (i.e. death) for their stupidity. Typical of America, the children are the ones to bear the brunt of the damage.

      Those kids who survive will then carry on the expanded danger attitude into the next generation. Perhaps parents in 2025 will be handing their kids "some assembly required" personal helicopter kits ... hours later, they turn their backs while the {whop-whop-whop} sound fades into the distance.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
  28. I was thinking about something else... by OrthodonticJake · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I saw the article link I was just imagining something like a portable battery charger; I am actually a little underwhelmed at what it turned out to be. I ride my bike to get places, but the exercise aspect of it is important to me; it would be cool if I could plug my iPod into the bike while i'm riding, though. What other devices would be useful on a bike with a renewable power supply?

    --
    I regularly report MSN spam to the Hotmail admins.
  29. How is this green? by Bastian · · Score: 1

    These things are replacing regular bicycles, not cars. In a sense, they're like the equivalent of an SUV for folks who can't own a car for whatever reason.

    A regular bicycle is greener than an electric bike in almost every way, from amount of materials consumed to the pollution involved in generating the electricity to power that bike to the horrible chemicals in the bike's batteries.

    Where did everyone start getting this idea that anything that is electric is automatically the greenest alternative? Next I'm going to be hearing that it's better for the environment to paint your windows black because electric lighting is more environmentally sound than natural light.

    1. Re:How is this green? by realdpk · · Score: 1

      Not all of us live in states/regions that get the majority of their electricity from coal/polluting power plants.

    2. Re:How is this green? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      Nuclear power is clean and safe, it is not technology preventing clean operation of all devices it is polotics and buisness

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    3. Re:How is this green? by Bastian · · Score: 1

      Fair, but all power plants pollute. Hydroelectric alters waterways and damages river ecosystems. Windmills kill birds. After Three Mile Island and Chernobyl, and with this whole barrlels-of-radioactive-waste-just-sitting-out-in- the-backyard problem that (at least American) nuke plants seem to have, I don't trust nuclear power (or rather, the people in charge of generating nuclear power) one bit. Solar is a net loss in energy, and tidal isn't that bad, but still alters ocean ecosystems.

      All power plants pollute. Maybe not much compared to burning fossil fuels, but even the greenest power plant still pollutes orders of magnitude more than riding a bike.

    4. Re:How is this green? by Bastian · · Score: 1

      WTF!? How can a process whose "low-level" waste remains hazardous for hundreds of years possibly be called clean and safe? Risks can be mitigated, can you really make any guarantees? And the real nasty stuff like Pu-239, are you really willing to say that stuff is safe at all? On top of that, are you willing to guarantee that no nuclear reactor will ever develop any dangerous structural problems?

      Besides, politics and business are a part of anything. You can't just say it's safe because only a couple groups of people make it dangerous, especially since they're the ones in charge of these things. If you're sitting in a room with a lunatic who is brandishing a gun, does it really make any sense to bother arguing that the gun is safe and it's just the guy holding it? Semantic arguments aren't going to change the situation one bit in either case.

      (And to answer ahead of time: yeah, that's great, recycle it. Now we have U-233, so it's not like there's no nuclear waste, and the reprocessing process isn't exactly what I'd call clean. We were talking about clean fuel sources, right?)

    5. Re:How is this green? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      when i referred to polotics and buisness, I was talking about the reasons we are not using Nuclear and hydroelectric almost exclusively. Breeder reactors can process radioactive waste down to more usable fuel and other products, the problem is that these reactors also produce weapons grade materials, so doing so requires high security. Really the way I see it, we should have a massive nuclear power complex somewhere in the interiour of the country distributing electricity out to everyone else, put it in the middle of nowhere so it can have as many Fences and a no-fly zone around it enfirced with AA missiles and F/A 18's

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    6. Re:How is this green? by realdpk · · Score: 1

      That is probably true (even when you count what it takes to produce and deliver the fuel for riding bikes (ie farming equipment and trucks to haul it and stuff)), and I agree that people-power is a great way to go. The reason it isn't used in urban settings is primarily because of poor growth management on the parts of cities, and of course good ol supply and demand.

      Still, some power is better than others, and by using electric equipment, we can (pretty much) adapt it to any future power generation that comes along. That's what I'm looking forward to, personally - a safer/cleaner electrical power generation system.

    7. Re:How is this green? by Bastian · · Score: 1

      Agreed, although I would point out that (at least in the USA), rural areas are even worse for people power than urban areas. Many of the cities I've been to are very good about setting up bike routes and lanes, and I've seen bus systems with racks so you can do a combination of bike and bus for your transportation. I think cities are starting to see what an amazing thing it can be for your traffic grid to encourage people to ride 10 blocks to the store rather than driving.

  30. Segway! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is it that China has this, while in the US all we have is $5000 side-wheel electric scooters that dump you off if you hit a depression in the sidewalk.

  31. I'll bet they're faster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given the traffic density you mention bikes are probably a faster way to get where you're going. In downtown Toronto, bike couriers or even runners are way faster than people in cars. In fact in downtown Toronto, many people find they are much better off without a car both in terms of money and time!

  32. Per-capita rate of electric bike by News+for+nerds · · Score: 3, Interesting

    is ranked in 2003:

    1. Japan
    2. China
    3. Europe

    Gross rank is:

    1. China (incl. Taiwan?) (500,000)
    2. Japan (200,000)
    3. Europe (10,000 and over)

    according to this US dealer.

    1. Re:Per-capita rate of electric bike by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >China (incl. Taiwan?)

      Who cares if it includes Taiwan?
      If its a mathematical formula you are dealing with, Taiwan contribution to a billion plus Chinese is minimal.
      But if its political, then by all means that small island is important.

      Sort of like saying US (incl. Hawaii)..it aint gonna change your stats.

  33. And in North America ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These things will be banned as quick as you can say, "You're in the way of my SUV".

    1. Re:And in North America ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or safety-crats will cut them back to a maximum speed that makes them completely useless, and then restrict to them special trails that go nowhere.

      I just don't understand the North American mentality of 'legislate to uselessness'. The "battery thing" is a mere detail in the problems that face innovative, truely useful, electric vehicles. Why do they have to work-like, look-like, and weigh as much as a car to be allowed on a road.

    2. Re:And in North America ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot the "must be licensed and insured" angle -- guaranteed to bring the cost of any small electric vehicle to something well past the point where it could be practical.

  34. There is no "Korea" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The 21st century is going to see the world power center moving east to some kind of India-Japan-China axis with Korea and Vietnam as secondaries

    There is no country named "Korea", and there is no sign that things will change. There is, however, South Korea and North Korea.

  35. Electric vehicles not green. by SoupIsGood+Food · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That electricity has to come from someplace... in China, that means mostly oil and coal powerplants with none of the pollution controls found in the west, or hydroelectric dams, like Three Gorges, that displace and literally enslave hundreds of thousands of people while destroying archaeological and historical sites. The most lethal dam disaster in history was a Chinese hydoelectric project gone wrong.

    Electric vehicles by themselves are not enviornmentally friendly. In conjunction with strict pollution controls and smart energy infrastructures, they can be. That's not the case in China. They'd be better off with a reliable fleet of diesel busses and subways.

    SoupIsGood Food

    1. Re:Electric vehicles not green. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
      or hydroelectric dams, like Three Gorges, that displace and literally enslave hundreds of thousands of people while destroying archaeological and historical sites

      People in China are under tight authority, but they are not "enslaved." As a fellow Chinese (thought from Taiwan) I deeply resent your biased comment, even it only shows how simple-minded you are. While the cost and benefits of the dam is still unclear, it is very irreponsible for a westerner to talk about how bad it is without even knowing all the detail analysis and the society's big picture. It is well awared that there are going huge chages. In fact this is one of the few issues the members in "the people's congress" have very significant difference in opionions. I'm not commenting on whether the decision is right or wrong. I am saying we need to look deeper before we open our mouth and make a fool of ourself.

    2. Re:Electric vehicles not green. by HyperCash · · Score: 1

      "while destroying archaeological and historical sites." Somehow I think that the increase in the standard of living that electricity to the chinese people far outwieghts the benefit of saving a historical sight. I get so sick of people saying oh no, we can do that, we'll lose our history. Fine, lets keep the history and live in the same level of poverty and sickness that people did back then, too. Or not. Build the dam. Live for the future, not the past. --HC

      --
      So I'm jump'n up and down screaming show me the money.
    3. Re:Electric vehicles not green. by ultramk · · Score: 2, Informative

      literally enslave hundreds of thousands of people

      Back this statement up, please. Links?

      The 2 main reason 3 Gorges is being built are thus:
      1. It will generate vast quantities of electricity, and pull millions of people out of poverty/3rd world conditions.
      2. It will control the annual flood/drought cycles that are responsible for the worst natural disasters in china, every year.

      I'm not saying it's the ideal solution, but at least i make an effort to understand the problems.

      m-

      --
      You catch enchiladas by picking them up behind the head and holding them underwater until they don't kick anymore -VeGas
    4. Re:Electric vehicles not green. by SoupIsGood+Food · · Score: 1

      "Tight authority" in this case means forced relocation to labor camps, without compensation for lost property and the cost to relocate. They were promised new land and money to make a new start... they were instead bundled into relocation camps, and either forced to work on the construction project, unpaid or so grossly underpaid, even for mainland china, they might as well not have bothered, or allowed to sit idle and starve. If this doesn't qualify as enslavement, I don't know what does.

      This isn't in the '60s under Mao, mind you, this was a few years ago under "modern" leadership.

      The modern, brilliant China you see in Beijing and Shanghai is built on the broken backs of the rural farmers and tradesmen. Never forget it.

      "Western" doesn't mean "ignorant and stupid."

    5. Re:Electric vehicles not green. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      President Hu Jintao, is that you?

  36. Re:BSD's new hot chick! by KnacTheMife · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    is she in any porn?

    --
    -- "Someone's gotta go back for a shit-load of dimes."
  37. Illegal in the UK by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 1

    Would you believe the government have classified them as motor vehicles, which they are, but FFS!

    You need a license and it has to have type approval and be taxed and have a registration plate which means you need insurance etc. None of which are going to happen.

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
    1. Re:Illegal in the UK by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      I believe they are illegal in Canada and for use on public property (such as roads) in much of the US. We were talking about it on the MLUG mailing list recently. Many drivers evidently feel it's their ride to have all of the road and so there is a lot of pressure to keep these off the roads and even out of bicycle lanes. To bad, they are all most of us need for going to work or to grab a loaf of bread and would save us a lot of money.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  38. say huh? by JAZ · · Score: 1

    "Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?"

    why is this a form of green transportation? the power for these things has to come from somewhere. and every form of energy production has some form of byproduct which we commonly know as pollution.

    what makes one thing more "green" than another has got to be either efficiency or renewablility (which is really just how efficiently we can convert solar power into a usable form energy) I'm leaving out nuclear because I don't know anyone (other than myself) that considers nuclear power 'green', even though everything is really nuclear power at heart. And I bet these things don't have nuclear reactors on them.

    Since this is an electric motor, I assume by green we must be talking about power efficiency, not power production - unless you put petals on the bike and use the motor as a generator. I don't see anyone paying to do that... oh yeah, the people at the gym... but again, not the discussion here. Are we suggesting that these things have some sort of super efficient motor? Typically, the most efficient thing to do is produce the power as close to where it will be used as possible, as there will be loss in transmission, since this is evidently not what is going on here and I don't see anything about a new super motor: can someone explain... What makes these a green transportation????

    --


    "Karma can only be portioned out by the cosmos." -- Homer Simpson
  39. Not green transportation. by MrDalliard · · Score: 1

    >>Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?

    Naaah, it's not green transportation, as echoed by previous posters.

    If these were replacing cars, yes, I would agree. However, cyclists use legs to power themselves. It also requires energy to make batteries, which also need charging somehow.

    Battery production is notoriously chemical intensive and I should think Chinese industry isn't so tight on it's environmental controls.

    In addition, instead of cycling to work, they're being electric-scootered to work. Sounds like a loss of exercise here too. It will take a severe toll on the health of the nation too, I should think. Give it time... watch them get fatter, like the rest of the western world...

    M.

  40. It's not because they are electric that they sell. by Bender+Unit+22 · · Score: 1

    It is because they look cool! :D

  41. TV Nostalgia... by a.deity · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of an old episode of Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist.

    --
    Option-Shift-K.
  42. How cheap are they to operate? by John+Seminal · · Score: 2
    I am looking for a cheaper way to get around town and to work. I am mad that gas costs so much, and might get even more expensive (I am spending over $35 a week on gas for my trip to work). But I dunno if those bikes are the anwser.

    When I run my window AC unit in the summer, my electricity bill goes up 3 times what I pay in the winter. If that electric bike has to be charged 6 or 8 hours for a 25 mile trip, what kind of cost per mile are we getting? Granted, gas just hit $2.25 a gallon where I live, but my car gets 25 miles to the gallon. Plus, I can drive my car in the rain.

    What we need are better cheaper cars, perhaps cars that have solar panels to add energy so a car is not 100% gas driven. And maybe a cheaper source of power, as it seems those who control oil production can put us over the barrel.

    --

    Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."

    1. Re:How cheap are they to operate? by rebelcool · · Score: 1

      What we need are better cheaper cars, perhaps cars that have solar panels to add energy so a car is not 100% gas driven

      These are already here. They are called hybrids, perhaps you've heard of them. They have battery banks that are recharged by a generator that engages when you let off the accelerator.

      In 10-15 years, there will probably be more hybrids sold than gas-only vehicles.

      --

      -

    2. Re:How cheap are they to operate? by John+Seminal · · Score: 1

      The only one that I heard of was a Honda that ran on gas and electricity. It had to be plugged in to charge its battery, and you still had to buy gas. And I don't think it got more than 45 mpg, and I think it cost close to $20,000. What I am talking about is simple, small cars that can get a person from point a to b, and cheaply. Maybe something like the Geo Metro. Is it possible to make and sell a new car for under $5000? That should be the new challenge for the auto industry.

      --

      Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."

    3. Re:How cheap are they to operate? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      not with current regulations, even if the design was tecnically sound and safe, it would be missing Govt mandated features A-F and woud be fought by major automakers because it would harm profits, sadly the country is becoming a corporate profit machine, anything that hurts the big corp's gets banned.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    4. Re:How cheap are they to operate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're as cheap as the cost of an extension cord long enough to reach the neighbor's outlet.

      But seriously, you don't have to use the same mode of transportation every day. You can use a bike on nice days, use public transportation* on rainy days, and your car on occasions like when you have early morning or late night meetings.

      *I realize many American cities are not well setup in terms of public transportation. Unfortunately you won't see the average American take its head of the sand any time soon.

    5. Re:How cheap are they to operate? by rebelcool · · Score: 1

      Your info is completely wrong. There are several hybrid models available now, and none of them require being plugged in to charge its battery. They use the car's kinetic energy to do it rather than having the brakes convert it to heat (like any non-hybrid vehicle does) Honda, AFAIK, has never sold a "plug in" electric car.

      Their most efficient hybrid is the insight, which is a small two-seater that makes 65 mpg. They also have a normal sized civic hybrid that makes around 51.

      More impressive is toyota's prius line which in 2004 now is a medium-sized 4 door hatchback that competes with models along the line of 4 cylinder accords in price and performance.

      The next couple of years will see hybrid SUV's, notably toyota highlander (and its Lexus counterpart) and the ford escape. Toyota has pledged to have a hybrid version of every vehicle model by 2010.

      --

      -

    6. Re:How cheap are they to operate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the battery stores 0.156 kWH
      if charging efficiency is 33% then it takes about 0.5 kWH to charge the battery

      so it will cost less than 10 cents to charge.

  43. E-bikes are not "green" by bratmobile · · Score: 0, Troll

    E-bikes are hardly "green". Batteries contain all sorts of evil chemicals. And they have to be charged, of course -- and in China, that probably means a coal-fired power-plant.

    China already HAS "green" bikes. They have Chinese engines. You know, the kind with legs.

  44. Green- WHAT? by HexRei · · Score: 2, Insightful

    According to one user, electric bikes are popular because they're cheap, and can take you all around town on one charge. Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?"

    Power from the outlet requires a generator or plant of some kind, as well. If theym like the US, generate much of their electricity from fossil fuels, all they've done is move their pollution problem to a different sector.

    1. Re:Green- WHAT? by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      This is only partly true for two reasons. Fisrt, assuming these would be replacing cars or motor cycles, they would consume less power in city driving due to their smaller mass. Second, since power can be produced in many ways, it can be produced from solar, hydo electric or nuclear power as well as from fossil fuels.

      Moving away from internal combustion engines is generally good because it means more posilibities for power production. Of course, that doesn't necessilary mean that it's good for the environment.

  45. Who would have guessed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?

    Indeed, how could those stupid, filthy chinese be more civilized than God's Chosen People in any way...??

  46. Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
  47. Dr Katz had to be the worst cartoon ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dr Katz had to be the worst cartoon ever. Unlike almost every other cartoon, they had a problem keeping things still. The lines crawled in a nauseating fashion, even on static objects like table lamps. I suppose they need to employ cartoonists with real bad Parkinson's disease somewhere, but that does not mean that the results look good on the screen. Compared to this, even anime is great.

  48. Proper marketing will solve that problem... by John+Seminal · · Score: 1

    All they would have to do is have some comercials showing how smart the owner is for not throwing away his money on gas, maybe a scene of some hot chick driving around, and it will become acceptable. They can sell "acceptible" just like they market clothing fads, car styles, hair styles, anything. I remember when muscle cars were cool, like my old 1984 Mustang GT with a 5.0 liter engine. Just yesterday some asian kid with mommys honda came driving past me, thinking he was the stud of america. It is all marketing.

    --

    Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."

    1. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1
      Just yesterday some asian kid with mommys honda came driving past me, thinking he was the stud of america.
      Well, yes. Asians ***ARE*** studs; they have to be. They're not the most prolific race for nothing...
    2. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      I remember when muscle cars were cool, like my old 1984 Mustang GT with a 5.0 liter engine. Just yesterday some asian kid with mommys honda came driving past me, thinking he was the stud of america. It is all marketing.

      Pray god you never run into a tweaked out Subaru (or even a Honda). Your 5.0 is 20 years old - a lot has happened in the meantime.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    3. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by adamfranco · · Score: 1

      maybe a scene of some hot chick driving around, and it will become acceptable.

      After touring about Italy, all I could think of is getting my hands on a Vespa (with a cute chick on the back).

      Driving down the coast near Sorrento were thousands of young people on vespas heading to the beach, most with beautiful, bikini-clad women on them. Show some video of Italy on US TV and the things will sell out.

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    4. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by bill0755 · · Score: 1
      Pray god you never run into a tweaked out Subaru (or even a Honda). Your 5.0 is 20 years old - a lot has happened in the meantime.

      OK, if we are going to take that path, yes, a lot has happened since the reign of the muscle cars. The biggest thing is that with emmissions regulation, nearly all of the performance modifications are now illegal.

      When I put a 375 hp Chevy 327 into my '64 Triumph TR4 it wasn't called 'tweaking', and I've not come across a Subaru or Honda since that could even come close in performance.

    5. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Pray [to] god you never run into a tweaked out Subaru (or even a Honda). Your 5.0 is 20 years old - a lot has happened in the meantime.

      Such as stickers that add horsepower? ;)

      There hasn't been THAT much change in the last twenty years. "Ricers" are a phenomenon that didn't exist up in the 80s, but by and large the additional performance isn't enough to close the gap between a commuter car and a sports car designed to be a sports car.

      If you really want speed, the places to go are European sports races, professional (certified) drag races, and world speed record tests.

      As others said: spend the same ammount of money on the Mustang, and you'll spank any upgraded commuter car.

    6. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Such as stickers that add horsepower? ;)

      Just watch out for that built STi - 450Hp + AWD is nothing to sneeze at.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    7. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      You mean a Subaru WRX STI SEDAN, built up from an additional 150 horsepower?

      Yes, that's not something to sneeze at. It's a car designed to be sporty by the professionals.

      However, I wouldn't put it against a Chevrolet Corvette Z06 with a similar ammount of adjustments. Well, maybe for the quarter mile--but not much after that.

    8. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      The cool thing is that the STi is about $32k. Add $3600 for a new engine, about $1200 for a larger turbo, and some more money for engine management, and you're suddenly much faster than a Z06 (until it gets its own upgrades). Of course, building that STi and running it on the drag strip would be a sin - these cars are built for chewing through dirt tracks that tend to eat cars for lunch. There's something cool about races like the Dakar Rally, where even finishing is an achievement.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    9. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      The cool thing is that the STi is about $32k. Add $3600 for a new engine, about $1200 for a larger turbo, and some more money for engine management, and you're suddenly much faster than a Z06 (until it gets its own upgrades).

      I wouldn't be too sure about that. Oh, I'm ready to admit the possibility, but until we see some real numbers (accelleartion, top speed, etc.), I wouldn't put any money down.

      Of course, building that STi and running it on the drag strip would be a sin - these cars are built for chewing through dirt tracks that tend to eat cars for lunch. There's something cool about races like the Dakar Rally, where even finishing is an achievement.

      There is. But I wouldn't race a sports car on them. Maybe an SUV or a rebuilt sports car with a higher suspension, but definitly not a sports car designed as a sports car. The nature of Dakar is such that it really is an SUV race, not a sports-car or speed race.

    10. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'm ready to admit the possibility, but until we see some real numbers (accelleartion, top speed, etc.), I wouldn't put any money down.

      Head on over to here and take a look at the proven power bragging. This should give you an idea of what sort of power subarus are putting down and how they get it. Unfortunately, I don't see anything in there about lap times, so you'd have to look elsewhere for that. Maybe google for 'solberg'?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    11. Re:Proper marketing will solve that problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a fat bald fuck head. Go pull your greasy dink.

  49. different, but more efficient by rebelcool · · Score: 1

    1 well maintained power plant that can charge say, 10,000 vehicles, has a much higher efficiency and lower pollution than if those 10,000 vehicles were running their own gas motors.

    --

    -

  50. Not even close to green by metalhed77 · · Score: 1

    If you need to charge a battery it isn't green. One of china's many polluting power plants is really powering your bike.

    --
    Photos.
  51. It's hardly green by Chairboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's hardly green transportation, not when the source of the electricity is coal and gas burning plants. All you've done is relocate the pollution out to wherever the power plant is.

    It seems as if many self-styled environmentalists (who wear their badge in the form of an all-electric vehicle) are the personification of shortsighted NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard). They either don't understand that electricity comes from SOMEWHERE, or they don't care about the pollution, only that it doesn't happen where they live.

    1. Re:It's hardly green by ultramk · · Score: 1

      Centralized production of electricity from coal or other fossil fuels is orders of magnitude more efficient than in an internal combustion engine. Also, emission-reducing devices are far, far more efficient on a very large scale.

      In other words, you're completely, utterly, totally, wrong.

      Electric vehicles also open themselves up to other forms of power-generation (solar, wind, geothermal, hydro).

      Did you even bother to think before you posted?

      m-

      --
      You catch enchiladas by picking them up behind the head and holding them underwater until they don't kick anymore -VeGas
    2. Re:It's hardly green by Chairboy · · Score: 1

      Actually, you are mistaken. For centralized power production to be 'orders of a magnitude' more efficient, it would need to be hundreds, if not thousands of times more efficient. That is simply not true.

      It's true, centralized power production is more efficient then an infernal combustion engine in a stop-n-go car, but it's more like two or three times as efficient, not the fantasy number syou stated. Don't forget about the amount of current lost between the powerplant and your charging station, as well as the power lost in the AC to DC conversion.

      Also, when you burn coal, you're also releasing considerable amounts of radioactivity into the air that you aren't when you burn petrol or biodiesel. In their zeal to get rid of radioactive threats, the environmentalists have pushed contained nuclear plants aside in favor of coal plants that pump rads into the air 24-7.

      Finally, it doesn't matter if electric vehicles 'open themselves up to' things like solar or wind power if that power source is not where you get your watts. Just because 'you can' doesn't mean 'you will'. You might as well cut your legs off and shave all your hair as 'it makes you more desirable' as an astronaut because you aren't carrying excess weight.

    3. Re:It's hardly green by adamfranco · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Please see my previous post.

      Its not NIMBY, so much as an engineering problem. Power plants are few, and easily regulated/upgraded in comparison to cars. Additionally, they are vastly more efficent than car engines that are constrained by the need for mobility. Yeah, it would be great if we could power our grid via wind, solar, tidal power, etc, but getting rid of the little, inefficient, gasoline engines is the first step.

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    4. Re:It's hardly green by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you just admit that you are wrong?

    5. Re:It's hardly green by kamapuaa · · Score: 1

      Small electrical bicycles are far, far more energy efficient than large SUV's. Small-engine motorcycles get fuel efficiency of ~150 mpg, and I'm sure that these bicycles are far more energy efficient than that. SUVs, on the other hand, can get 15 mpg or lower.

      --
      Slashdot: providing anti-social weirdos a soapbox, since 1997.
    6. Re:It's hardly green by Chairboy · · Score: 1

      How righteous can you be if you post as Anonymous Coward? The numbers support my argument, does pixie dust support yours?

  52. Whoa. by blair1q · · Score: 0


    How would you like a beowulf cluster of...

    ah, who'm I kidding?

  53. What about self-recharging? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure we've all seen the radios and flashlights and whatnot that a hand pump for one minute charges for 4 or something.

    Could such a thing not possibly be implemented into this, too?

    1. Re:What about self-recharging? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess not

  54. Kyoto facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Some facts on the "Kyoto Accords"

    There is absolutely no evidence of any connection between human activity and "global warming".

    Assuming a connection, Kyoto is all politics. It required certain countries, such as China, to actually increase greenhouse emissions. If it was really honestly about the environment, it would have required reductions from all a fair and consistent fashion.

    That the US rejected it had nothing to do with "corporate payback". It had everything to do with the fact that Kyoto had nothing to do with the environment, and was designed to damage the economies of certain countries while boosting the economies of other countries.

    The US made the intelligent choice instead of following the lemmings off the cliff. Now that there has been time, other countries such as Russia had been able to objectively evaluate things and realize that Kyoto is a sham as well.

    1. Re:Kyoto facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There is absolutely no evidence of any connection between human activity and "global warming".

      Haha, and Burger gobbling Americans wonder why they are falling behind in science!

      Oh yes, global warming is a myth just like evolution!

      Bwahaha, oh well, most Americans are too ill informed to realize their rate of publication in scientific journals as well as patent applications and grants are shriveling fast in the face of a modernizing asia and europe that spends money research and schools instead of bombs and guns!

      Of course Russia wants to oppose Kyoto they have a huge stake in the oil industry considering they have huuuge oil reserves! I mean it's fine to say you oppose clean fuels because the richest people in your country are making a killing off oil. But to say you oppose cleanr fuels and then make foolish psuedo-scientific statements is just lame. Just admit it, You like to see Dick Cheney be very rich and you like to pay lots of money at the pump for your gas. Just admit that and it's fine. But you just make America look pathetic when you actually try to deny global warming, hahah.

    2. Re:Kyoto facts by dustinbarbour · · Score: 1

      First off, the world is in the midst of one of the colder times in its entire 4.6 billion year history. So get off of your high horse and check the facts. Ya' know there have been plenty of times where the planet has not had ice caps. And guess what.. plenty of life lived and survivued during these periods.

    3. Re:Kyoto facts by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      At the very least, it's worth noting that there's good CORRELATIONAL evidence that rising CO2 levels have an impact on the temperature. The graphs of global CO2 levels in the air match very closely with upward trending temperature graphs. You can find such graphs in some meteorology textbooks, and sometimes in geology textbooks.

      When volcanoes erupt, the change in climate for a couple years is usually noticable and fairly immediate. Tokyo, IIRC, has a climate system all its own because of the density of its population. The city generates enough heat to modify the climate around it. (I think there was a /. article a while back that talked about this.)

      It's worth noting that your assertion that we're in one of the colder times in the Earth's history is entirely incorrect. Starting in the late 1300's, the planet went through a 'little ice age' right after the 'Mediaeval Climatic Optimum'. Temperatures in the 1990s were already higher than they were around the year 800. About 18000 years ago, temperatures were roughly 4.5 degrees (celcius, of course) lower than they are now.

      While it's true that the planet has been without ice caps (early in planetary development) and that life has existed in the past when it was warmer (nobody has ever disputed that), it's pretty irrational to believe that we have ZERO impact on our environment and air temperature. Further, just because the planet and life will survive doesn't mean that we can do what we like. It's entirely possible that we can make life very hard for ourselves, or cause the next mass extinction. The planet is tough. Something will definitely survive no matter what we do. I just want to be part of the life that survives, and I want a reasonable quality of life at the same time. If that means I have to pollute a little less now, that's no problem with me. It's not actually very hard.

      Lastly, the source of MY information is the textbook 'Essentials of Meteorology' by C. Donald Ahrens. You can find the graphs and data that I'm talking about in chapter 13, about changing climate. I would politely request that you get off YOUR high horse, check YOUR facts, and stop haranguing other people about their lack of solid information until you get some yourself - or can at least quote your sources.

      (BTW, to anyone that has access to this book, second edition - figure 13.10 is the one that shows that air temperatures tend to closely follow rising and falling CO2 levels in the atmosphere.)

  55. Re:BSD's new hot chick! by KnacTheMife · · Score: 1

    heh, oh well

    "If I'm gonna get my balls blown off for a word, my word is poontang."

    --
    -- "Someone's gotta go back for a shit-load of dimes."
  56. Here ya go by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 3, Informative

    Giant LaFree. Does exactly what you want.

    I test rode one, and personally, I don't like them, except if you really need it.
    They're heavy (80lbs), slow, expensive.

    I can go farther, faster on a regular bike.

    1. Re:Here ya go by adamfranco · · Score: 5, Interesting

      As an avid cyclist, I couldn't agree more. Me on a 17lb road bike can cruise at 17mph for long distances or 25mph for short distances/passing cars (really fun in my congested little town). Plus, I get good exersize while commuting.

      That said, for those not young, not in good physical shape, or just lazy, the electric bike would be great. It would also be good for those who don't work for bike-friendly employers since you can arrive at work without being all sweaty and needing to change.

      On another bicycle note, I recently came accross this great short essay entitled, "In Praise of the Bicycle".

      Excerpts:
      ...Man on his feet is thermodynamically more efficient than any motorized vehicle and most animals. For his weight, he performs more work in locomotion than rats or oxen, less than horses or sturgeon.

      ...The bicycle is the perfect transducer to match man's metabolic energy to the impedance of locomotion. Equipped with this tool, man outstrips the efficiency of not only all machines but all other animals as well.

      Its a nice read if you like cycling, commuting via bike, or are stuffed in your car in rush-hour traffic.

      I then looked up the stats for the 2003 Tour and Lance Armstrong's winning finish of the 2129.4 mile race in 83h41'12" gives him an incredible average speed of 25.45miles/hour.

      While a thoroughbred can run a mile averaging 40mph, a long distance speed record for the Karbarda breed or horses (the only one I could find data on) is 50km at 18.5 mph. Its pretty safe to say that attempting to ride a horse or just entering any animal in the Tour would kill it in a
      matter of days if not less.

      Go bicycles!

      In my opinion, anything that gets people out of their SUVs is a good thing for the world and these things are much better than nothing.

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    2. Re:Here ya go by iminplaya · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...less than horses or sturgeon.

      I'm a sturgeon
      hooked for the very first time...

      You have my humblest apologies. I just couldn't help it. I don't know what came over me.

      What were we talking about? Oh yeah, bicycles and China. On the subject of China leading the way, we might find that they will be on the vanguard of many things to come. Without IP to hamper their innovation, they could easily surpass the U.S. and Europe. Their politics not withstanding.

      --
      What?
    3. Re:Here ya go by adamfranco · · Score: 3, Informative

      In this later post I worked out the efficiency numbers for cars, to compare them with bikes, the results:

      Car: 66 Calories/km (45mpg)
      Walking: 0.75 Calories/km => 88x more effiecent than a car (at 45mpg)
      Biking: 0.15 Calories/km => 440x more effiecent than a car (at 45mpg)

      (note, the above assume that the numbers in the linked article for people, are in nutritional "C"alaries = kilocalories, instead of SI calories. If they are SI, then the bike is 440,000x more efficient than the car.)

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    4. Re:Here ya go by Snafoo · · Score: 1

      The bicycle is great, and I use mine all the time. But before you start complaining about automobiles, think of those of us up here in CANADA where winter can peg the thermometer at unbikeable temperatures for up to two thirds of the year (at least it does where I'm from -- Edmonton -- you other canucks might find that, almost literally, YMMV.)

      Personally, I love cars.

      --
      - undoware.ca
    5. Re:Here ya go by GFW · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I then looked up the stats for the 2003 Tour and Lance Armstrong's winning finish of the 2129.4 mile race in 83h41'12" gives him an incredible average speed of 25.45miles/hour.
      Note that that includes a significant number of mountain stages, with some serious climbs. On the flat, the peloton often rolls along at 55 mph.
    6. Re:Here ya go by adamfranco · · Score: 1

      think of those of us up here in CANADA where winter can peg the thermometer at unbikeable temperatures for up to two thirds of the year

      :-) I live in Vermont where the morning temps through January and February are normally -20*F to -5*F (-30*C to -20*C). This does tend to put a damper on biking. It is possible, though generally your cabling freezes causing breaks and shifting to stop working. Durring those months my short bike ride becomes a very long walk. For those further out of town biking just isn't an option part of the year. That said, just because biking/etc can't be done in snow/ice/cold/rain/thunderstorms, doesn't mean that one has to use a car exclusively. :-)

      Speaking of Canada, I went up to Montreal yesterday and filled up my tank for the first time in about two months. Damned is gas expensive now! $2.29US/gal for the middle-grade stuff.

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    7. Re:Here ya go by Papineau · · Score: 1

      55 kph, not 55mph. They reach 55mph in descents, but the hour record (1 hour in a velodrome) is something around 60 km. I'm not sure if Indurain is still the record bearer for that one, he was a few years ago.

    8. Re:Here ya go by Papineau · · Score: 1

      If you had come here last Monday, it'd have been a bit higher than that. It was 98.9 cents a liter (the conversion depends on the rate between $US ans $CAN, but should be around 2.70$US/gal) at the time, and the local medias think it will be higher than that at the beginning of next week (as in, some gas station will need to tack a "1" someway or another in front of the usual digits for the price).

      Going back to cycling in the winter, there are a couple bicycle courriers in downtown Montréal (and probably other major northern cities as well, like Ottawa and Toronto) which work all year long, doing nearly 100 km per day going from building to building, trying to avoid pedestrians while going as fast as possible in everyday traffic.

    9. Re:Here ya go by adamfranco · · Score: 1

      I've been looking for that speed record for a "normal" bike for a while, but could only find info about this guy who hit something like 150mph while drafting behind a special car. Thanks for the info!

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    10. Re:Here ya go by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      You know it's a good bike when it's downhill both ways.

    11. Re:Here ya go by JPriest · · Score: 1

      Most electric bikes look like something my grandmother would ride. Anyone know where I can pick up a kit for my trek?

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    12. Re:Here ya go by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      At least you northerners have a legitimate complaint about the weather. Here in LA, when I ride my motorcycle to work in 55deg weather everybody asks me if I'm cold on the motorcycle. Well actually yes, 55deg with a 60mph windchill can be pretty cold. It's called weather. That's what the jacket and gloves are for.

    13. Re:Here ya go by kidgenius · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I saw a TV show where they showed that. They took one of those "streamliner" cars used to race at the salt flats, and they build this huge "wall" on the back. The rider grabbed a hold of a bar, and was towed up to speed. Then he just kept peddling in this semi-enclosure where he wasn't being hit by air. Kinda cheating if you ask me :)

    14. Re:Here ya go by ObjetDart · · Score: 1
      Yes, there are many places in the world and times of the year when bicycling is simply impractical.

      The problem I've noticed, however, is that most of the people who use "weather" as an excuse not to bike to work are still in their cars when it's 70 degrees and sunny out.

      --
      I read Usenet for the articles.
    15. Re:Here ya go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's the solution:

      Quit worrying about your image.

    16. Re:Here ya go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like you have any clue what *most* people do. Self-serving broad generalization. clap clap.

    17. Re:Here ya go by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Lance Armstrong isn't an average example of humans, so you can't compare him with the average horse or other animal.

      Maybe you could train a horse to pedal, I've wondered about stuff like that...

      But if you want to talk about continuous travel, go check out bluefin tuna. They're amazing creatures.

      --
    18. Re:Here ya go by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      I've biked down to 0F / -17C; with adequate clothing it's OK as long as the road is not iced up. My breath was freezing in my beard, but due to the exercise I wasn't feeling cold.

    19. Re:Here ya go by Pyrrus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm told that the top bicyclists (no doubt including lance)
      have a power output of 1/2 hp (for once, that's actually a somewhat
      relevant figure), so he's not that far behind.
      And before anyone flames me, .5HP = 378 W

    20. Re:Here ya go by JPriest · · Score: 1
      RE AC: "Quit worrying about your image."

      I like products that have class and style, I am not saying I am not "worried about my image", but I wouldn't drive my grandmothers bicycle for more reasons than image.

      The fact that all the electric bikes I see look like something the wicked witch drove in the Wizard of Oz just tells me that the market has maturing to do.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    21. Re:Here ya go by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      "Lance Armstrong isn't an average example of humans, so you can't compare him with the average horse or other animal."

      "a long distance speed record for the Karbarda breed or horses (the only one I could find data on) is 50km at 18.5 mph"

      Sounds like the original poster already considered this in his post. Before you go praising tuna note that you'd have to subtract all the work done by the currents the tuna use before you come up with your final btu/mile estimate.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    22. Re:Here ya go by tedtimmons · · Score: 1

      I've got the lafree lite from ebikesnorthwest. Nice bike, actually. In another life, I used to do longer-distance riding (back to back centuries- one each day).

      I use my hybrid bike for commuting. I live in hillly Seattle. I can get to work in 30 minutes on a bike, lock it up, and walk up and get going. I don't have to shower and change- usually I'll change my shirt, but I'm not dripping in sweat like the people who are apparently training for the Tour de France while commuting to work.

      The lafree lite has some good circuitry in it- when I'm cruising along level roads, it doesn't help unless I am slowing down. The biggest boost is on hills- if I stay at a level, steady cadence, the bike will double my power. That makes hills seem (physically) like very little more than a straight section (except for the overall speed).

      I'd get a lafree lite if I was in the market. If you're a diehard MTB or Road rider, it's not for you. But it gets guys like me some exercise and fresh air.

      Some comparisons:
      motorcycling to work: 20 mins
      driving to work: 28 mins
      bicycling to work: 30 mins
      bus to work: 75 mins

    23. Re:Here ya go by Eivind · · Score: 1
      ...The bicycle is the perfect transducer to match man's metabolic energy to the impedance of locomotion. Equipped with this tool, man outstrips the efficiency of not only all machines but all other animals as well.

      It's not terribly impressive that a person on wheels outstrip animals that have to walk, fly or swim, atleast on a even, smooth surface such as a road.

      As for the other claim, that man on a bicycle outstrips all machines, it's bullshit.

      A electric engine converts electric energy into mechanical work with an efficiency well into the 90%s. The human body is nowhere in the ballpark. I doubt it can even reach 25% in converting chemical energy (i.e. food) into mechanical energy.

      Thus, a machine consisting of a battery and a electric engine hooked up to the wheels will easily beat any cyclist in efficiency.

    24. Re:Here ya go by billcopc · · Score: 1

      If you're into speed, you should look into ultralight frames like carbon/titanium-mesh. Some of them are under 5 lbs (without wheels). The downside is that you will fly to the moon if you jump off a pothole :)

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
  57. Why not China leading a green initiative? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You tit. What is the obsession with all you
    suck-arse story posters who feel the need to
    add your pseudo-editorial commentary tag lines?

    Post your story and keep it objective. Display
    your half-brained, semi-skimmed, aspartame
    abilities in a post if you really can't keep
    it in.

  58. Apple's Bikes by Bobdabishop307 · · Score: 1

    Due to the popularity of e-bikes, Apple has announced their new bike mounted laptop, the iBike.

    --
    "Anyone who quotes me in their .sig is an idiot" - Rusty Russell
  59. wtf? in the 80's we called 'em mopeds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'cept these run off batteries, not gasoline.

  60. Green is the color of Esperanto... by Jonathan · · Score: 1

    And this year's Universala Kongreso will be held in Beijing, so green is still appropriate...

  61. Even worse by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Shanghai is (as of Dec 2003) restricting bikes on its major streets.

    "Bicycles have gone from carrying more than 70 percent of travelers in Shanghai as recently as 1990 to from 15 to 17 percent now, according to the Shanghai Urban Planning Bureau."

    Upward mobility indeed.

  62. Introducing the e-bike for real men by News+for+nerds · · Score: 1
  63. Viva Thinkmobility & Giant LaFree by turtleshadow · · Score: 2, Informative

    I got a Thinkmobility several years ago. With Gas hitting near $2/gallon in my area its looking to be a decent investment.

    However thinkmobility has tanked their bike lines after Ford went back to regular electic vehicles.

    Me, I think they took the incentive money for low emmission vehicles and ran.

    Lee Iococca also started an entire new company for his bikes.

    I think the biggest hold backs to Western adoption of such vehicles
    1) Former use of SLA batteries; NextGen LION has just arrived
    2) Lack of adequate storage -- dont get a folder buy/rent a shed! Typical bike sheds (home & work) are needed as electric bikes are too big an investment to have someone huck it in the back of the F350 truck. They are much lighter than vespas but still heavy enough to deter most thieves given most come with a key ignition
    3) Lack of common components; Battery sets and chargers need to somehow standardize

    I can get to work, in an hour, 15mi, with a fully loaded briefcase and work clothes at a mild peddle speed without breaking a sweat. My spandex wearing 21 speeder co-workers have no such luggage ability and must undergo daily scrotum scrunch.

    I have to stay off highway and take a bit longer course as my top burst speed is 18mph which kills the battery. I live in a very hilly area and use them to my advantage as I can use the peddle assist on the light hills and use big hills and gravity elsewhere.

    The best part is the company is unknowninly paying to charge my battery as it charges under my desk!
    Who needs cubical lights?

  64. about as green as a watermellon by bsDaemon · · Score: 1

    i once heard Ralph Nader &co compared to watermellons: "sure they are green on the outside, but on the inside, they're about as RED as you get."
    Being China, this is contextual.

  65. Re:BSD's new hot chick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    From what I hear she's eating too much. Quite the fatty lately.

    liar.

  66. "a red china is a green china" by line.at.infinity · · Score: 1

    That's a propaganda slogan that I've read in Beijing, but there's an oz. of truth in that. Capitalism tend to be eco-unfriendly.

  67. Re:BSD's new hot chick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, many of the pictures seem to be from Defcon IX, which was last year. And come on, she's not THAT fat.

  68. People's weight might be a problem in Europe/US by lub · · Score: 1

    This tells me that the loading weight should be less than 75 kg. No problem for the average asian man/woman, but for a lot europeans/americans this will be a huge problem. And, more weight will decrease the action radius of 40-50 km.

  69. Re:BSD's new hot chick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uhhh, I meant XI, of course. There are also pics from IX, tho.

  70. china's not the first but rather a bigger... by MoFoQ · · Score: 1

    market for it.

    Electrically assisted bicycles have existed in Japan for quite some time now (since the mid to late 90's).

    Here's Panasonic's and one from Yamaha Motors. The reason why it's not fully EV (and hence called a hybrid) is to make it so there's no need for a license as it is still mainly human powered (motor assisted, especially when going up hills and such).

  71. not Green = Redundant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok, to all you people posting that the electric bikes are not green:

    READ BEFORE YOU POST

    I'd like to actually read through an article comment page without having so much redundancy. should get a -1 redundant for all you posters that don't read.

    Anyways, now to my real post. I just want to make aware that even though China produces the majority of it's electricity with fossil fuels, that there is a potential for conversion to solar or natural production of electricity. Hydro dams and Geothermal generation (and many other methods) have potential and once fossil fuels run out (or become insanely expensive) these alternatives will become more attractive. Lucy for China, alot of people will have motor vehicles that use electricity already. Good Job China.

  72. There ain't no completely "green" anything by John+Jorsett · · Score: 1

    As innumerable posters have noted, the electricity for these things has to come from somewhere. A lot of those same posters then take the position that human-powered cycles are the true "green" transportation. If by "green" one means "nonpolluting and not consuming resources," then no, they're not. The extra energy the human expends has to come from food, which has to be grown, harvested, transported, stocked, and sold, all of which takes energy. The waste produced by the rider has to be transported and disposed of, which takes energy and may add to pollution itself, depending on how finicky the rules for pollution are in the rider's community. Additionally, the rider is producing increased levels of carbon dioxide, which contributes to global warming according to some people. Energy has to be expended in the making and distribution of the bicycle. Face it, one's mere existence is a drain on the resources of the universe, so if you want to be completely "green," killing yourself is about the only way to spare nature your wear and tear (and even then your decomposing corpse will contribute your final donation of pollutants to the planet). Personally, I'm going to impose myself on nature, and damn the consequences.

  73. Green Bikes? by tisme · · Score: 1

    How are these bikes "green" when they are being charged by hydro plants that are diverting entire rivers and changing ecosystems. The energy source has to come from somewhere, and just because it is electric does not make it any better for nature. Old-fashioned bikes are the ones that are truly "green." (Except of course for the damage done when making the bike, advertising the bike and so on.) While electric bikes may convert some people from using their car (not me by the way because I live in a rural area) they will also cause more energy to be used if kids who normally would have had "regular" bikes start using them.

  74. MOD PARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Offtopic, this is about electric bicycles, not how electricity is generated.

    Or flamebait, any non-n00b would know this is just going to make a giant nuclear power flamewar.

  75. Ah, the genius of a sheltered American viewpoint. by Masque · · Score: 1

    Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?

    Yes. That's brilliant. Who would have guessed? It's absolutely miraculous! The 500 million human-powered bicycles estimated to be in use in China can now be replaced by those that require electricity and FINALLY China's position as leader in green transportation will be secure.

    Why bother to learn about the world when you can make it up on Slashdot?

  76. MOD PARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Offtopic.

  77. Green Transportation? by Omega1045 · · Score: 1
    Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?

    Uhh, until we build a lot more nuclear, solar and wind power plants, electricity in most areas of the world (including the US) still comes overwhelmingly from fossil fuels.

    US DOE stats show that nearly 80% of electricity in the US comes from fossils fuels. And because electical lines loose power do to resistance, and batteries are not perfect, electically driven bike are not very efficient.

    The bike is polluting, maybe hundreds of miles away, but it is still polluting.

    --

    Great ideas often receive violent opposition from mediocre minds. - Albert Einstein

  78. MOD PARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    offtopic

  79. Re:BSD's new hot chick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is just a troll to get the ceren fanboys going, I'll believe it when I see it.

  80. Hydroeletrics, WindPower, Solar Power... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are many sources of electricity that are clean...

    Hidroeletrical power might have an initial impact, but is very cost-effective, and can last almost forever without producing pollution.

    1. Re:Hydroeletrics, WindPower, Solar Power... by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Until the earthquake hits, of course.

  81. More Kyoto facts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny
    "Haha, and Burger gobbling Americans wonder why they are falling behind in science!"

    You are probably one of them. The majority of Americans are easily-fooled boobs who believe in silly and trendy "man-made global warming" theories.

    Global warming is a reality: we are coming out of an ice-age cycle, and the heating has not peaked yet.

    "Of course Russia wants to oppose Kyoto "

    The oil reserves have absolutely nothing to do with it. Russia opposes Kyoto because they are one of the countries not bamboozled by the junk science.

    "You like to see Dick Cheney be very rich and you like to pay lots of money at the pump for your gas."

    Americans actually pay way too much for gas: much more than the real value. Get rid of the special taxes (tax gas like everything else) and the price at the pump would plummet.

    "But you just make America look pathetic when you actually try to deny global warming."

    Learn some facts. Global warming is real, the idea that it is caused by humans is utterly unfounded.

    When the average temperature went up 1 degree C between 7,200 B.C.E. and 7,193 B.C.E. what happened then? Did the mammoth blame the sabre-tooth? Or was it Republicans with time machines? Dratted Dick Cheney! He used time machine and melted the glaciers! (I only bring up Dick Cheney, who has nothing at all to do with this subject, because you did first)

    "make foolish psuedo-scientific statements is just lame"

    Exactly.... but you did anyway.

    1. Re:More Kyoto facts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can see you read all the research Exxon-Mobile bought, lol.

      Let me guess, you believe the conservative think tanks that produce research saying Free Software is going to ruin the American economy too!

      "The Moon: A Liberal Myth" seemed funny at first but it's getting a little too close to reality these days...

  82. You can never have truly 'green' power..... by spamster · · Score: 0

    Even if you build wind farms, or use solar energy, you will still likely need to use fossil fuel burning energy sources just to build the components you need. You need plastics for both windmill generators as well as solar cells. Once you get 'em built, then you have to have parts on hand to maintain them. So, you probably will have a considerable 'one off' pollution issue in the manufacture of so called non-polluting energy sources. And you will still likely need petroleum products (plastics anyone?) for spare parts or lubricants. Then of course, there are the critics who claim that windmill and solar energy and hydroelectric dams are evil because they interfere with the natural environment or the creatures living within it. We can never be truly 'green'. There is a cost to everything, the best that we could hope for is to lessen our impact as much as possible through well designed and efficient means of producing power, consuming less and improving our recycling methods.

  83. I LOVE IRONY! by NilObject · · Score: 0

    I love the environmentalists who drive electric cars, thinking that they're greener than regular cars. I read a white paper saying that electric cars, if their electricity comes from a coal power plant, get's an equivalent of 12 miles per gallon. It's just pushing the source of the energy out of the consumers mind, making them think that they're really being "greener".

    If you want to be "greener", ride a bike, walk, run, carpool, etc. Isn't this obvious? I thought it would be by now.

    It seems like such a capitalist idea: Sell people products to make them weaker and more prone to disease through lack of exercise then turn around and sell them healthcare and surgery and diet pills and diet books and insulin, etc etc.

  84. Not really green by HeaththeGreat · · Score: 1

    This isn't really a green technology. Green would be just using bikes. It takes fossil fuels to power those bikes, and even if you used solar/wind/water/geothermal/hamster power, you are still increasing the overall raw/hazardous materials requirements versus people-powered bikes. China used to be cool. Now they suck.

  85. The US is not driving this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "Actually Korea probably would have reunified by now but the US needs a military base on China's doorstep to threaten her"

    You are forgetting the driving force in the Korean dynamic: the dictator in North Korea. You are perhaps right that without the US, there would be a unified Korea (due to the North's invasion of the South and slaughter of its millions). However, the US having a base to threaten China has nothing to do with this.

    "with the North to make excuse to keep troops in South Korea, where most Koreans North and South want them gone"

    The North Koreans are not allowed to express their opinions. As for the South, the problem is that there is a younger generation there that did not experience the invasion from North Korea that their parents did, so they are rather ignorant about the place.

    The situation is much like East and West Germany. Once the communist dictators give up their thrones, unification happens.

  86. And cost by Stone316 · · Score: 1

    It would probably cost 2-3k to buy one in the states. Its funny how things in other parts of the word are cheaper but cost more here... The reason is because over there they can't pay more so things are priced cheaper. Over here we'll buy it if its cool so they'll put a huge markup on it.

    --
    "Thanks to the remote control I have the attention span of a gerbil."
    1. Re:And cost by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

      I saw a scooter style E-Bike at the mall for 400 bucks complete with a OSU Buckeye paint job.

      --

      Gorkman

    2. Re:And cost by mphase · · Score: 1

      No dude. Sorry but these are not overly expensive in the States, even years ago you could get one for a few hundreed or alternatively get an addon for any normal bike for about the same price. You may be able to find horribly expensive ones with a nasty markup for yuppies but it is not the general condition of the market for these bikes in America.

  87. Re:leading green transportation? hardly.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    A bunch of Chinese coal power plants are more efficient and less polluting than (tens of) thousands of internal combustion engines in cars, even when accounting for supposed "quality defects" in Chinese technology.

    To put it the other way: If they turned off those coal power plants tomorrow and started using (even more) cars, we'd be in deep shit (literally).

    Centralized electricity production makes sense. Really.

  88. "Black" power generation - green transportation? by WarPresident · · Score: 1

    Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?

    Electricity is not generated by magical pixies. In China, it's primarily generated by Coal-fired generating plants with the kind of pollution controls that only Dick Cheney would love. Mmmm, smell the "clean" power!

    People who think e-bikes are good for the environment probably also think the same of hydrogen power cells. Trouble is, do you know what the source of your generating plant is?

    Wanna save the environment? Don't drive an SUV when you could drive a car. Don't drive a car when you can ride a bus/train. Ride a bike or walk to work.

    --
    Here come da fudge!
  89. Car-Motorcycle Hybrid by mrgreen4242 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    This is slightly off-topic, but maybe someone will be able to point be in the right direction... I am envisioning a vehicle that is roughly 6-7ft long, 4ft wide, and about 4.5ft tall. It is shaped like a 'pod', i.e. very aerodynamic and egg like. It's got 3 or 4 wheels small, low rolling resistance tires, and is powered with a smallish motorcycle engine. The body is plastic with a minimal aluminum frame underneath. There is one seat, with basic controls. No A/C, heat could be added, utilizing 'wasted' heat energy from the the engine, of course. Gear it for maximum fuel efficiency, and a peak speed (in terms of good gas milage) of about 70mph

    Don't these little motorcycles we have now get 60+mpg? And they are tuned for speed/acceleration, not fuel economy. So we should be able to get even more than that if tuned properly. The extra weight would drop it down some, but the addition of better aerodynamics and lower resistance tires will up it some as well.

    I can't see how this would be anymore dangerous to the driver than a motorcycle is, and those are allowed everywhere. Plus you could drive it in the rain, and feasibly have some storage space inside.

    I've been envisioning this for about a year now, and would buy one if it were under $6000, went at least 65mph getting 55-60mpg, were legal on the highway, and had a 7-9 gallon tank (400-550 miles per tank).

    My question is if there is anything like this out there, of if I should go ahead and start building one?

    This is kinda on the topic, so please don't mod me down to hard!

    1. Re:Car-Motorcycle Hybrid by garyok · · Score: 2, Informative

      Check out this concept car for a euro-interpretation of your vision. They're hoping for fuel consumption rate of 188 miles per gallon. They are also calling it the C.L.E.V.E.R. car (to cash in on the Smart car's advertising budget I assume). A nice idea but a dumb name.

      --
      One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors - Plato
    2. Re:Car-Motorcycle Hybrid by IceFoot · · Score: 2, Informative

      After World War II, the German aircraft company Messerschmidt toyed with this very idea! They developed and marketed a tiny car, more like an enclosed motorcycle with 3 wheels. Pictures here

    3. Re:Car-Motorcycle Hybrid by mrgreen4242 · · Score: 1
      Ya, that's exactly what I am talking about. Well, close. The design is EXACTLY what I am envisioning. However, I think that something based on a conventional gas engine would be a better choice, for now at least. Also, the top speed should be at least 65mph, for safety on the highways, at least here in the states. Finally, I would like to see them scrap the whole tilting concept and just use better performing conventional shocks, to both save money any weight.

      Looks like they are estimating it at around US$10,000. Not bad, but wonder if they went with an existing motor design and scrapped the automatic tilting stuff if it would be cheaper, more powerful, and lighter (the last two resulting in a higher speed). Probably lose a bunch on efficiency, but even at less than half of their projected 188mpg, it would be a great product! (Esp. if said changes dropped the initial price to say US$7,000). Thanks for the link tho, it's just what I was looking for.

    4. Re:Car-Motorcycle Hybrid by Herz · · Score: 1

      BMW Isetta is another one. There were others too, can't remember the names of them, though.
      http://www.cqql.net/bmw.htm

      --
      In vino vici
    5. Re:Car-Motorcycle Hybrid by mad.frog · · Score: 1

      Exists. Or rather, existed: the Corbin Sparrow, a three-wheeled electric fiberglass thing made by Corbin Motors. I had one (briefly) and it was a brilliant concept, but was derailed by the Corbin's utter lack of a freakin' clue about building vehicles (or running a business in general)... they were incredibly unreliable, and as it turns out, fundamentally unstable in some real-world road situations. Anyway, they went out of business last year, but you can still find info about this by googling for Corbin Sparrow....

  90. Re:Would u like the chinese to drive SUV instead? by Jameth · · Score: 1

    I use a folding, man-power-only bike to travel a bit over two miles to school and work, although I jog regularly to stay in shape.

    I do not own a car. When I need to travel further, I use mass-transit, taking the local bus into town or using Greyhound for greater distances.

    Please remove you foot from your mouth, your toes are complaining about the gastric juices.

  91. Mods by bendelo · · Score: 1

    170 posts at the time of posting this, 7 at +4 but none at +5. Seems a bit strange?

  92. Stationary generators greener than portable by Michael+Spencer+Jr. · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That electricity has to come from someplace... in China, that means mostly oil and coal powerplants with none of the pollution controls found in the west

    Stationary power plants produce more energy and less pollution than a sea of small movable engines consuming the same amount of fuel. Chinese power plants may pollute more than American power plants, but they both pollute less than mini power plants (automobile/motorcycle engines) designed for size and weight instead of efficiency.

    You can eliminate more pollution with $1,000,000 worth of pollution control equipment on one power plant, then you can with a $100 worth of pollution control equipment on each of ten thousand automobiles.

  93. Re:Stigma : DWI scooter by chiph · · Score: 1

    They're also used by people who have lost their license after being convicted of driving while intoxicated.

    Chip H.

  94. Too late, they already are by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    BANISHED BICYCLES

    "It as a milestone of sorts when Shanghai, China's biggest city, banned bicycles on its largest avenues last month, but also a belated acknowledgment of a change that has already transformed many large cities in China."

    "Automobile sales in China, which reached two million last year, are growing at an annual rate of more than 50 percent. The growth of private car ownership has brought with it a car culture that increasingly resembles the American one, but with even worse traffic jams, especially in Beijing. Downtown parking spaces have become precious."

    How did YOU get to work yesterday, my little AC troll?

    1. Re:Too late, they already are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I took the subway.

  95. More green than not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For all you guys knocking on how 'green' this is, consider this - every single chap on a human-powered bike is a candidate for a shiny new automobile. As people create more value and have to commute longer distances to create this value, the regular bicycle won't cut it. If, instead of upgrading to a low-end (but still gas-guzzling) car, some of them went with an electricity-powered bike, it is definitely a positive outcome for the environment.

  96. I'd rather have a Pocket Bike. by BrookHarty · · Score: 1

    I'd rather have a Pocket Bike. Cheaper too, 249 on ebay.

  97. Fuel cells? by danharan · · Score: 1

    I'm not keen to lug an extra 30 pounds (compared to a conventional, human-powered two-wheeler), especially if most of that is a lead battery...

    Could this be an area where fuel-cells make sense?

    --
    Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
  98. funny slashbots by CAIMLAS · · Score: 4, Insightful

    does anyone else find it hillarious that everyone is chiming in, "oh, green transportation! no surprise it's not the US doing it!"? what bullshit.

    Hello! These a) are electric bikes, b) are replacing non-powered bikes, and c) would not even be viable in an industrialized country where the infrastructure is dependent on massive transportation systems.

    So please just stop. This isn't even "green", when you compare it to the human-powered bikes that they're replacing, ffs. There's no need to be so zealotrously anti-American; you're simply illustrating your ignorance.

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    1. Re:funny slashbots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      zealotrously

      Try "zealously", next time.

    2. Re:funny slashbots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wah wah.
      There's green and there's green.
      If everyone walks we wouldn't need to spend energy on forging steel, etc.

      However those bikes are certainly greener than almost everything out there. For instance the H2s.

      -d

    3. Re:funny slashbots by coopaq · · Score: 1
      Agreed. Could everyone who hates cars and the
      American use of them please provide a nice
      summary here of all the reasons.

      Please no flamebait mods. I think everyone would
      love to have it all in one place.

      What are the pros and cons of driving a car in America?

      I can tell you I've been to Texas and getting
      around anywhere in that state requires a car or at
      least a motorcycle.

      Cars in cities where too much congestion occurs drives
      everyone a crazy, but does it make automobiles so evil?

      Personally I love my bike, but love driving even more... besides rush hour!

    4. Re:funny slashbots by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1

      Electric bikes produce little or no exhaust, right? So the pollution is confined to the power plant, which can be regulated? Take up less space on the road, cause less wear and tear on the road requiring less maintenance?

      --
      [o]_O
    5. Re:funny slashbots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US has 4% of the world's population, yet produces 31% of the greenhouse gas emissions, 25% of the CO2 emissions. And is doing nothing about it. China is well within their Kyoto goals, unlike the US which has done NOTHING to kerb its emissions. There are many reasons to hate the US, this is just one.

    6. Re:funny slashbots by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      well, being american, i can outline what makes it necessary to own a car, and why, for the most part. granted, there are regions of the US where a person can get by with a bike, public transportation, or such - at least for the majority of their weekly travels (say, in some of the smaller northeastern towns - provided they live in that town - or in the metro areas - provided they haven't too far to travel/don't mind traveling on the inefficient and expensive public transit).

      1) it's not uncommon for it to be quite a few miles between anywhere you need to get throughout the day. For instance, I live in a midwestern US "metro area" fo 200,000 people - the core city itself is roughly 150,000, I'd wager. Not too big, no, but it's about 3 miles to the nearest grocery store (and we're relatively close!), 7 miles or so to my college, and all paths are heavily conjested with traffic, with no safe areas to use a bike. In larger towns or suburbs, it's often quite a few miles simply to the edge of a "housing subdivision" - you can notice this if you take a flight over the midwest.
      2) Public transit is horrible. it essentially doesn't exist, as there are a scant number of stops, and they're not made very frequently (1+ hours, never on time). It'll take twice as long to get where you're going via bus as via car, usually in quite an around-about fashion. Furthermore, they're very expensive for what they are, and only the people that are unable to drive seem to take them, making them a very uncomfortable place (mentally handicapped, drunks, etc.), as these people often get city-sponsored passes.
      3) Automobiles are fairly insanely priced for leasing or purchase. It's quite cheap - it makes a lot more sense to pay $100/month for car payments to a rich person than to pay $40/month for the bus. Likewise for people using used/older cars - $20/40 a month for their older car, vs $40 for the inconvenience of a bus?
      4) It's a chicken/egg problem for public transit. People won't ride the transit because it's not there/it sucks. The transportation isn't put into place because people won't use it/they alraedy have 30,000$ cars.
      5) many, many people don't live "in town", and thus it's a transit just to get to town. When I lived in Virginia, it was a good 20 minute drive to town, which had to be made multiple times daily .
      6) Weather does not permit for biking or even public transit throughout the year in many parts of the country. It gets too cold, and is completely hostile to anyone outdoors. It gets to be -30F here in the winters regularly. My car will often have troubles traversing the roads, and it's a 6 cylinder Ford Taurus - a fairly 'average' sized car.
      7) Our infrastructure was designed with the automobile in mind. Thus, nearly everything is miles appart, and towns are zoned in square yard segments that are thousands by thousands of feet. Everything is made into little "centers" - the center of town, the business district, etc.

      Europeans often get off on dissing Americans for driving everywhere. This is pretty rediculous, as our medium sized states are larger than many European countries. I suspect that this stems largely from ignorance - they think the world is a lot smaller than it is. It takes days to drive across our country, driving over speed limit, even if you don't stop to sleep (rotating drivers). This size makes it so that if you don't drive, you're basically going to be a hillbilly, as you won't be able to go anywhere if you don't drive. It's not so easy to bike across a county here, as they're many, many miles across with few towns - let alone towns with stores in many states. We don't have the benefit of the nicely organic european cities, with stores and housing within a block of each other, consistently (so I hear).

      There's more stuff, but I'm hoping you get a general idea...

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  99. Commute by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    I was thinking that public transportation could be more effective if one could take a bus or train, but also carry their own scooter vehicle for the last few miles or so that the bus/train cannot reach.

    Or perhaps leave a small vehicle at each end of the route rather than carry it on the bus.

    Or just rent the darned things.

    However, roads would have to be made more scooter-friendly, otherwise the insurance will go sky high because of the risks.

  100. If you want *truly* green... by NeuroManson · · Score: 1

    Demand that e-bike manufacturers include a solar panel for trickle charging.

    You're already paying $150+ for a bike, imagine what electric bill savings you would get by charging the bike with solar, after the initial $100 markup a solar panel would add.

    --
    Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
  101. Just in case one of those links goes down.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I dont know how well those sites are going to take it, so I slammed up a couple of mirrors
    I have mirrored the millinium scooters (first link) at http://mirrorit.demonmoo.com/r_436/www.millennium- hk.com/scooters/elbike.html
    Skycity (second link) at http://mirrorit.demonmoo.com/r_436/www.skycityuniv ersal.com.hk/other/scooter/scooter13.htm
    Grand-China (third link) at http://mirrorit.demonmoo.com/r_436/www.grand-china .com.hk/ebike2.htm
    Promax (fourth link) at http://mirrorit.demonmoo.com/r_436/www.promaxbicyc le.com/e-bicycle.htm
    B2S (fifth link) at http://mirrorit.demonmoo.com/r_436/www.b2s.com/tra deleads92504.php TDC (sixth link) at ttp://mirrorit.demonmoo.com/r_436/www.tdctrade.com /imn/03062704/auto016.htm And I didnt bother with the greenbay press-gazette because I think it can handle its own.

  102. Unless you're old, or have physical problems... by aquarian · · Score: 1

    ...I can't imagine anything you can do with one of these things that you can't do with a regular bicycle.

    I once tried an electric Lepton scooter (like a Vespa), and liked it so much I considered buying one. However, when I really thought about it, there's no trip I could do on the scooter that I couldn't already do on a bicycle. The scooter may be quicker in traffic, but that's not really an issue.

  103. they don't care if it's green or not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    all they care about is if it's cheap. if it were cheaper to run a bike that ran on whale blubber, they'd be doing that.

    will the a/c

  104. It shifts the pollution by dbIII · · Score: 1
    Generating electricity is not green. Once again this is a demonstration of euphoric environmentalists not knowing how things work.
    It's a case of shifting the pollution from a busy street corner to the top of a very high stack with some cheap but effective anti-pollution gear that will never fit on a motor vehicle behind it. Efficiency is low, but that really isn't the problem that needs to be solved. Another problem this solves is that these bikes are a lot cheaper than the equivalent motor bike, and weigh a lot less, so probably consume less energy in the long run anyway since the power output is so low. These are enhanced bicycles with low speeds and tiny motors, not something that can take a corner at 100mph.

    A car is not the answer if you get stuck in traffic while a bicycle that takes up little space on the road can get you there faster. Many western cities have bicycle couriers in the inner city for exactly that reason. We're not talking about long commutes through sprawling suburbia here.

  105. Bashing the Green by Gleapsite · · Score: 2, Insightful

    All of you are proclaiming that this isn't leading the green movement. Well lets just take a scanario out into time and see what you think then.

    Now.
    we have Oil.
    America makes gas using cars, and gas using moped.
    China makes electric bikes. that run off of coal power plants.

    years into the future.

    We no longer have Oil.
    millions of useless chunks of metal, formerly known as SUV's appear in junk yards in America. We have a transportation crisis because gas prices are insanely high.

    China, running on its electric bikes, and possibly vehicles, loses its coal power plants. However these are replaced by hydro- and solar-electric ones.

    So, ultimately having electric vehicles [bikes cars] eases the passage into utilizing sources of power that are green.

    And China is leading.

    --
    face the world with eyes of fire.
    1. Re:Bashing the Green by m1chael · · Score: 0

      Where is my water powered tricycle?

      --
      I know you are psychotic, but please make an effort.
  106. better usage of energy by denny_d · · Score: 1

    Ok, electricity has to come from somewhere, batteries have to be produced, pollution happens everywhere along the production chain and in usage of electric anything, including the little box you're looking at now. A little search on the web turned up some really pricey bikes from tidalforce that have specially engineered gearing that passes energy back to the battery, apparently, when coasting. I called an ebike dealer here in the states; he told me that when he sees these chinese bikes they are in pieces and hard to fix because they're not that robust nor are parts available. I've been shopping for a bike for my commute, 20+ miles, partly because I hate driving, hate making oil companies even richer, have solar powered dreams of living off the grid, and love being out in the open instead of in a mobile rat cage. The tidalforce bikes are pricey now but there'll be one of ebay any day now and I'll be able to afford one! Maybe some ubernerd will engineer a folding solar panel that I can use to cover my new e-bike so it charges off the grid while I'm in the office... there is a demand for alternative fuel and transportation.

  107. "green transportation" by Lu+Xun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Don't assume that these electric bikes are gaining ground because of environmental or even traffic concerns. They're cheap, and the vast majority of Chinese people cannot afford a car. I'd bet that once they can afford them, they will happily trade in their e-bike for a big, emissions-producing vehicle. The growing middle class is already doing this, contributing to the world-wide upsurge in oil demand and price hikes at the pumps.

    --
    That's not a soda... it's a caffeine delivery device!
  108. FUCK OFF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People in China used to ride, under their own power, bikes all over town and now they have lots of electric ones.... Yeah who would have thought that China would be into "green" transportation, THEY ALREADY FUCKEN WERE!

  109. Two words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Motor technology. The East have been ahead of us for years in this. For cameras, vidoes, sex toys, racing cars, robots, god just about eveything can be improved by better electric motor technology. While we have concentrated on communications technology but driven cars, the Japs and Chinese have refined and improved this old technology to the point where electric bikes are a perfectly reasonable engineering feat and a practical product.

  110. Mod Parent Up by HighOrbit · · Score: 1

    Absolutely Right. It can't be very "green" when it is ultimately powered by a smog-belching coal-fired powerplant.

  111. Yeah, but is it really green? by mcrbids · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?

    Greener != green

    What about the lead-acid or nickel-cadmium batteries commonly used in these? How many one-armed, 3-eyed Chinese babies will be born as a result of pollution of these terribly toxic metals?

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  112. Perfect! by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

    I live in a perfect range for something like this to work. I am about 4-5 miles away form work and at 15 MPH, it would take me LESS time to ride one of these to work then it would take to ride the bus. This also frees me of the bus schedule during the warmer months plus I woulr try and strech it. I could probably ride this from march until about november or so in Columbus. I could also ride this in a limited fashion in the winter as well. Plus soon the bus will be getting bike racks on the front of it so I can ride part way when it's rainy. Now, where do I find one like this? I think what we will shortly see is tons of these things being shipped to the US like the cheap DVD players. 100 or less e-bikes would be immensly popular for people just trying to get to work.

    --

    Gorkman

  113. Better than a car by lgbarker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While an electric bike may not be as green as a pedal bike it's sure better than a car.
    In light of reports that China is the fastest growing automobile market in the world, electric bikes look pretty good.

  114. How is this technology Green? by nucrash · · Score: 2, Interesting

    By charging the bike up at home,you are only transfering the location of which the poluting chemical reaction takes place.

    Now, if the bike was charged up like a hybrid car, charging the battery as the bike was being pedalled, or such, this technology would be wonderous. But there is the matter of having to create the bike itself, or atleast the battery, which isn't so good for the environment.

    --
    Place something witty here
  115. Mobile nirvana? by DeVilla · · Score: 1
    Wow! This green safe transportation is great and viable! I can get rid of my car and use one of these bikes to ride 30 miles to and from work each day! .... hmmm ... Minnesota winters .... I-90 in the rain with 18 wheelers ... Maybe not yet. I could use it here in town, but I walk here. It's the only exercise I get. Why kill it with a motor bike.

    Heaven help us mid-westerners when the folks in the coastal cities realize that they can get by a lot of the time with lite transport like these bikes. They'll try and outlaw or oppresively tax the vehicles we still need just to get by out here in the sticks.

  116. It will fail in US by tftp · · Score: 4, Funny
    I looked through all the comments so far, and seems like nobody noticed one deficiency of these bikes that will completely ruin their sales in the USA.

    These bikes can carry a rider weighing up to 75-100 kg (about 200 lbs.) Thus, majority of potential users here will be excluded. They would simply break the bike :-)

    1. Re:It will fail in US by hobbsbutcher · · Score: 1

      So I ride two bikes at once...wanna make something of it?

      --
      Jonathan B.
    2. Re:It will fail in US by tftp · · Score: 1

      Let me guess, your bikes are welded together, have a single gasoline motor, and a roof? @=:-)

    3. Re:It will fail in US by mrgreen4242 · · Score: 1
      Funny as that is, it is a valid point. I'm about 230lbs, and I'm not really that fat. I'm just a bigger guy, at 6'2" with a big frame, and, ya, some extra pounds. Even at my 'goal' weight, i'd still be hovering at the 200 level, right at the limit of these bikes.

      While I could easily ride one then, and most likely now, the speed, acceleration, and max range would suffer immensely, making it much less appealing a vehicle.

    4. Re:It will fail in US by m1chael · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and the reason why the Segway failed was because of the whole standing up thing.

      --
      I know you are psychotic, but please make an effort.
    5. Re:It will fail in US by heffrey · · Score: 1

      6'2" and 230lbs sounds pretty fat to me

    6. Re:It will fail in US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there's another definition of 'fat' in the US :P

    7. Re:It will fail in US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "6'2" and 230lbs sounds pretty fat to me."

      Are you that tall? That's not out of line for a man that tall with half decent bone and muscle structure.

    8. Re:It will fail in US by No-op · · Score: 1
      6'2" and 230lbs sounds pretty fat to me


      as someone who is 6'4 and 240, I can say that you're not exactly right. I can't comment on the original poster's actual body frame, but if you are 6+ feet tall and have a large musculature, you should weight at least 190 or considerably more.


      maybe you're thinking of those string bean tall guys?


      I know that I looked at some of those bikes, and while it would be nice to have a cheap electric-assist bike I really don't see many manufacturers that aim towards western body sizes (that aren't ludicrously expensive bikes, that is).


      Anyway, just my 2 cents- and here's another tip: don't pick on tall guys with muscles in bars :)

      --
      EOM
    9. Re:It will fail in US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, if you actually trust those damned BMI charts, then 6'2" at 230lbs is downright obese (a BMI of 30 or greater.)

      However, there is a huge difference between a 6'2" 230lb guy in the clydesdale class at the local bike race vs. a 6'2" 230lb guy who's only form of excercise is his Xbox.

      With the help of a handy body-fat analysis scale, it's easy to calculate that at 6'3" tall and 244 pounds, I have approx. 190lbs of lean body mass. At a nice, respecatable 10% body fat, I would weigh around 210 pounds. That's a BMI of 26.2, and is considered overweight. Yet anything less than 10% body fat is simply not possible unless you are a body builder.

      At least some folks now admit that the BMI is inaccurate for many people, it has not been modified to allow for these people. At least the chart my doctor used back in the 80's allowed for different body types.

      To bring this back on topic... I destroy 36-spoke MTB wheels on a regular basis and eat road bikes for lunch. I doubt that the $200 electric bike would last more than a week with me on it, assuming it could even get up the smallest of hills.

    10. Re:It will fail in US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Especially since bathroom scales now max out at 1000 lbs, where 20 years ago the top number was 350 lbs.

      Hospital gurneys had to be updated a few years ago because the max weight was insufficient to hold the occasional "husky" American. Hospitals are now sporting the latest in tubular-chassis design, with the ability to carry in excess of 650 lbs.

  117. electric is not "green"! by snarkasaurus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When are you people at Slashdot going to realize that electric vehicles do not stop air pollution, they only move the place it gets made?

    You have to charge up the battery. That takes electricity from the wall. Which comes from a power plant. Which BURNS something, usually coal in China. Really gawdawful brown coal too, not the nice hard stuff we get in the USA and Canada.

    Smokestack or exhaust pipe, take your pick. You want to be green, you better pedal it yourself. True, you will be burning sugar and making CO2 while you pedal, but unless you plan on going "back to the land" by stopping breathing on a permanent basis, you'll be doing that anyway.

  118. Electric scooters in the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Morris County, New Jersey I have noticed more and more electric and gas-powered scooters being used. They are mostly used by adolescents but also by immigrants from Central and South America.

    Some of those things are loud, much louder than cars. I do not like this trend. It annoys me when I am trying to play Quake2 and some brat on his electric or gas scooter, is going constantly in circles on my street. When I was the same age as these turd nuggets I rode a BMX bike...

  119. or you could get one of these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://groov-e-skootz.com/vegosx600electricscooter .html

    I want to get one but they are not legislated in Canada for use on the road or sidewalk.
    But i'm going to talk to Transport Canada about reviewing the laws to accept electric motor scooters.

    Hopefully they can see this as a viable form of transport.
    I could use this to get to work and back ( a 12 mile commute that takes 40 minutes on the bus per trip) This scooter would get me there in 20 minutes.
    Using hydro electricity (about .05/mile as opposed to $1.30/mile in a mid size car.
    With no insurance or licencing necessary, it truely is a cheap city commuter.

  120. Pray Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok I give you a modded out subaru (rsx) would take a lightly modified 5.0.

    But a Honda?
    Please. What Honda would you pick an SI?

    The 5.0 might be 20 years old, but nascar uses 20+ year old technolgy and they can still beat the fuck out of any honda or any Subaru.

    Besides price performance ratio.
    All he has to add to his 5.0 is a supercharger, full exahust with no Cats, and some 3.73 gears for the total cost of about 4 grand (say his car cost 4 grand.) and He car would easily run low 13's.

    I'd like to see a Honda or Subaru do that.

    Remember this is no replacement for displacment.
    Technolgy closes the gap with VTECH and all that other garbage. But there is no replacement for displacment. You can add all you want to your
    honda and your Subaru, but spend that same amount of money on a 5.0, and the 5.0 will end up killing your car.

    Case in point, my friend has a 1994 5.0 Mustang with nothing but full exahust (no cats) and 3.73s. I saw him smoke the fuck out of a Civic SI that had everything done to it besides NOS.
    (I'm talking pullies, gears (don't ask me how that works in a front wheel drive car), exahust, chip everything.

    THERE IS NO REPLACEMENT FOR DISPLACMENT!

    1. Re:Pray Why? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      I'd like to see a Honda or Subaru do that.

      WRXs can do 12s. Granted, it costs more, but there you go.

      You can add all you want to your honda and your Subaru, but spend that same amount of money on a 5.0, and the 5.0 will end up killing your car.

      You can spend all that money on power and get your car down to 10 second quarters if you like. I'll spend some money on suspension and turn in lower lap times. My current interest is in rally sports, and I haven't seen any mustangs win that yet.

      THERE IS NO REPLACEMENT FOR DISPLACMENT!

      Keep telling yourself that. Your V8 makes good low-end torque, but you only spend a small amount of time there, right?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    2. Re:Pray Why? by Jonathan+Hamilton · · Score: 0

      Man your switch your argument real quick.

      I give you bang for the buck the Subura is a great handling car, but we were talking about power and bang for the buck performance, then you switch all the sudden to handling.

      If you want to talk handling, the how about a new Corvette? That handles better then a Subaru (given the right tires) and cost just a little more.

      So stop switching the arugment to make yourself feel better.

      My V8 makes good tourqe and low and high ends thats why it's better. If you want to get all about high end, then put fucking VTECH (really called variable timing which even Ford Escort ZX@ used) on a V-8.

      You can use all the technology and money you want, but there is still no replacement for displacment. If you want to spend your money on a car that handles well, honda's and subarus are still not the best by far. A Rx-7, porsche boxter, M-3, or something other then a Honda or Subaru.

      I give you that Honda's are nice cars for the money, and Subaru WRX are awsome cars (but they use a porsche engine.) But they are no where near the best car for the money if you want handling and speed.

    3. Re:Pray Why? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Man your switch your argument real quick. I give you bang for the buck the Subura is a great handling car, but we were talking about power and bang for the buck performance, then you switch all the sudden to handling.

      Well, I was talking about racing ability, which requires both. What surprised me was when you started in on drag strips, which aren't good for much beyond verifying what your dyno tells you.

      As for the Porsche engines, I don't geally know whether that's true or not. What I do know is that high end subaru engines seem to cost less and require less care and feeding than I'd expect from a porsche engine. Also, the last 4 cylinder porsche engine I'm aware of is a 3.0l that went in the 968. Perhaps they just share a common design style?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  121. First Bikes in China by InklingBooks · · Score: 1
    Those who're interested in reading about the first bicycles in China might want to read Across Asia on a Bicycle by Thomas Allen and William Sachtleben. They crossed northern China in 1892 on bikes, attracting quite a bit of attention. One Chinese described a bike this way:

    It is a little mule that you drive by the ears, and kick in the sides to make him go."
    The book, out of print for over a century, was brought back into print last summer by yours truly. Alas, for this struggling writer and editor, someone else is about to bring out a competing edition. But if you check both books on Amazon.com, you'll find they are so clueless about the story that on their cover they date the trip across Asia to 1890. Duh!

    After graduating from college, the two left St. Louis by bike for NYC in June of 1890. Crossing the Atlantic by boat and departing from London, they biked across Europe, wintering in Athens. The Asia leg of their around-the-world trip began in April of 1891 and wasn't completed until the fall of 1892. It's the 1891-92 Asia leg that's covered by their book. Unfortunately, they didn't do books on the U.S. or European portions.

    These two guys were amazing. Along the way and almost as an aside, they became the first two Americans to summit Mount Ararat. You can find quotes from the book at Across Asia on a Bicycle.

    Quite a tale. Two years after their journey, someone tried to repeat their feat and was murdered by Kurdish bandits near the Turkey/Iran border.

    --Mike Perry, Seattle

  122. hundred bux by zogger · · Score: 1

    Some friends of mine got their two teenage boys matching electric scooters for Christmas last, they said they paid 100$ for them. They seemed zippy enough , was watching them blast around the hood on them. Me, though, I would prefer a gas powered assist. I used to have one, YEARS ago called an aquabug, it bolted onto the front forks of basically any bike, would go around 30, and you could still pedal all you want. Wish they still made the things, they were great, got fantastic mileage. I drove mine all over bolted onto an old solid but heavy schwinn 10 speed. You could haul some serious cargo (groceries, laundry, etc) on the back and still go up hills real easy. At the time IIRC they were around 150$, (I swapped for mine but that's what I remember they were going for) and most likely they might be the same today if they still sold them, economies of scale, etc. What was really nice is, being front wheel drive, when you pedaled you were in all-wheel drive, a nice ride. they sucked until you got going more than 5 mph though, front steering heavy, but after that they cruised nice. I think they only weighed around 15 lbs, I know it wasn't that bad to shoulder it and hump it to my upstairs apartment I had at the time.

  123. Not Green at all by xtronics · · Score: 1

    And just where do all the Chemical batteries get disposed in China? Deep cycling batteries make them wear out fast - and the manufacturing and disposal of them is quite poluting - I'll take a clean ICE anyday.

  124. deja vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Haven't I read a similar post in the poll today? Oh yes: here

    Granted, you are the author of both post, so at least we can't call it plagiarism...

  125. Re:leading green transportation? hardly.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So like I said, not exactly leading the green revolution.

    The computer you're posting from would use more elctricity than one of these bikes.

  126. Three Gorges Dam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever heard of Three Gorges Dam
    http://www.chinaonline.com/refer/ministry_pro files /threegorgesdam.asp

  127. Not Green at All by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1
    Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?

    It's hardly green if the electricity comes from a fossil fuel fired plant.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  128. Is this a joke? by nemesisj · · Score: 1

    The day that China leads anyone or anything in "green" or eco-friendly behavior will be a long way away.

    The poster couldn't seriously think that motorized vehicles are more earth friendly than a bike, probably the most efficient method of transportation around.

  129. Other factors at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's also other factors at work in producing this cheap transportation.

    These bikes are selling for $150 USD but if you tried selling them in the 'states, the price would double at least. There's be markups, market value, advertising campaigns, liability insurance, etc, etc. The reasons you listed are valid, but there's also cultural reasons for this working.

  130. Nothing beats... by hysterion · · Score: 1

    Nothing beats the VeloSolex -- apparently still made by Impex in Hungary.

    Now I want one here...

  131. I love craaack! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's great!

  132. THIS IS NOT GREEN TRANSPORTATION by goombah99 · · Score: 1
    Bullsh*T. this is not green transportation unless you consider birth defects from improperly disposed batteries good. If you think I'm whistling nonsense then take a look at belize. Belize has a large population on its Cayues and the favored transportation is golf carts. and what do you do when the batteirs wear out. Why you dump them and Led gets into the water supply and into the food chain (fish). hence you see an upsurge in birth defect and slow-witted children

    if you charged for what is costs to dipose of the batteries properly no one would use the electric vehicles.

    I'd rather breath fumes than eat heavy metals.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
  133. Re:leading green transportation? hardly.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot greener than disgusting, fat burger eaters driving around gas-guzzling SUVs in gridlocked cities. I hope you all die you filthy pigs, the world HATES YOUR FUCKING FAT OVERHANGING GUTS!

  134. It's a move AWAY from "green" by rspivack · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but human-powered bicycles are the most environmentally friendly. Given the photos and horror stories of manufacturing in China and the lack of evironmental concerns, building those e-bikes, and especially the waste materials from the batteries, is probably adding to the pollution, not reducing it. Then there's all the additional fossil fuels needed to provide the electricity to charge the batteries. Can you say "gas price increases"? Business magazines claim part of the world squeeze in oil is the huge demand coming from China buying up all available spot market oil.

  135. China being Green is a load of BS by wing03 · · Score: 1

    Did anyone here catch a recent (within the last month) episode of National Geographic on China on PBS?

    The Chinese rely heavily on coal as a cheap means of heating. The major auto manufacturers have geared up to make and sell vehicles and sales are projected to skyrocket well past any other country in the world.

    The Chinese government, not wanting to scare any business away, has relaxed environmental controls so that only the "Euro 2" standard for emissions on vehicles is in place. Note that Euro 5 is what's reported as current and our own North American standards are far more strict.

    There is a constant layer of smog in the cities and our North American way of life is being exported and consumed heavily by those that have moved into the cities.

    If the poster saw alot of bikes there, he must've been in a museum.

  136. Who would've thought??? by Starve · · Score: 0

    When your one of the most populous countries in the world, you hopefully would have or want to gain some sort of notoriety for being "green." so you don't look like a resource vacuum

    --
    You have been sig'd
  137. They're hot in Hotlanta... by bergeron76 · · Score: 1

    Here in Atlanta, GA, USA the motorized bikes are becoming quite trendy. Heck, even Vespa's are becoming popular.

    I'm pretty sure that with Atlanta being one of the top 3 cities with the worst traffic problem in the US is probably a factor in their increased adoption rate.

    --
    Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
  138. Stigma-Political myopia. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree. I have no idea why the states restrict it so much. I've ridden one for years, and yes most people deal with it OK. But there's always the few that do something unthinkingly stupid that could get you killed. I've already been in the hospital once because someone wasn't paying attention, and have had my share of near misses (Even carried vehicle insurance though the law doesn't require it). Bump the speed up to 30 (yes I've been harrased by cops before. The funny thing is when the DMV says one thing about the rules, and the cop says another) and the cops are all over you like a bad takedown.

    BTW I'm in the market for a new one (unlicensed, Indiana) and I wonder what models are the best for about $2000 (Dear Ask Slashdot...)?

  139. Language at the site-Clown bike. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's always one thing I've wondered about Mopeds and Scooters. Why do they make the wheels so small? I've owned several over the years and only one had motorbike sized wheels. The small wheels don't handle the rough road as well, and get more easily damaged (potholes). Even regular bicycles have bigger wheels.

    BTW anyone know the best models of mopeds (recent)?

  140. Green Transportation-Puff the magic boiler. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There was SOME evidence, of which there has been a partial refutation, that its possible to reduce CO2 emissions to almost nothing with a highly efficient deisgn and a method (using some sort of ceramic device??? can anyone inform?)."

    Why yes we can. do that.

  141. Small wheels because of how the engine works by GoClick · · Score: 2, Informative

    Their easier to make with smaller wheels, both cheaper and lighter, plus the small engines tend to produce their horse power with RPM not torque so the smaller wheels are easier to gear for since the engine is already reving rather fast with little force. Smaller wheels can also easier to drive because there's less gyroscopic effect to overcome when turning. This is the same reason Japanese cars have little wheels.

  142. For the grace of Bicycles, go I. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak. I've been riding a bicycle for most of my life, and if it hadn't been stolen it would have been even longer. However I live in a big city, and that means that commutes can take from about 5 miles to 25 one-way (give or take). Easy while your young, but it gets progressively harder. Especially when you start adding up all the things that I've had to deal with on a regular basis. From drivers (hit by a car once. many close calls) to stiff head-winds. From snow (drifts, and mounds. Love it when the plow throws it up on the sidewalk) and ice (very fun), to hot sticky summer days. Up the hills and down the valleys. Streets and cross-country. Flat tires, and the occasional (other part failing, or just wearing out). It's all fun and games, when you know you have car to fall back on, but try being one of the many were your bike is your car, and you'll have an entirelly different perspective on things. Yes I bought a Moped, and it helped tremendously, plus I'm on time a lot more often (plus I've lowered my amount of road time) , and I'm not tired (and sweaty. People sweat even in winter) when I get there. Plus I can carry more than I usually could on a bike (tricked out or not, your still the motor in all this).

    1. Re:For the grace of Bicycles, go I. by aquarian · · Score: 1

      Easy while your young, but it gets progressively harder. Especially when you start adding up all the things that I've had to deal with on a regular basis

      That's why I included the "unless you're old" disclaimer. As for the other things you mention:

      From drivers (hit by a car once. many close calls)

      No difference bewteen a bicycle and a scooter.

      From snow (drifts, and mounds. Love it when the plow throws it up on the sidewalk) and ice (very fun)

      Again, no difference, except you may be going faster on a scooter, so you'll fall harder.

      Flat tires, and the occasional (other part failing, or just wearing out).

      Again, the same as with a bicycle, only a bicycle is cheaper to fix. If you have problems with flats on a bicycle, get some tougher tires. Some are practically impervious to any kind of damage, although a little slower rolling than the more fragile ones.

      I'll give you the hot and sweaty complaints, if you live in that kind of a climate in hilly terrain. But otherwise, just go easy. I know people who ride 20 miles each way in summer, in shirt-and-tie work clothes, w/ no problems. The rest of your complaints may be covered by the "old" disclaimer. Regarding that, though -- look at the kind of riding many "old" people are still doing:

      http://www-math.science.unitn.it/Bike/Countries/Eu rope/Tour_Reports/Tour_of_the_Alps/

      Jobst is in his late 60s, maybe 70 by now.

  143. Who would have guessed that China would... by DannyiMac · · Score: 1

    "Who would have guessed that China would lead the way in green transportation?"

    I know... thank goodness they switched to electric bikes instead of those wasteful, foot-powered versions!

    --
    - Danny
  144. It's LESS green by sterno · · Score: 1

    Right, and the irony is that this is making it less green. I mean, that electricity has to come from somewhere, doesn't it? How many folks in China do you think are hooking their bike up to a solar panel? No, they are hooking it up to the wall, which is being powered by some long dead dinosaur in all likelyhood.

    If you want green, try using the pedals :)

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  145. Re:leading green transportation? hardly.. by Scott · · Score: 1

    This is 2004, who says I have to post from something so archaic as a computer?

  146. E-Bikes pollute more than what they're replacing by Baloo+Ursidae · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They're replacing regular bicycles. And regular bicycles run on a good meal, and there's no avoiding the pollution that causes, whether or not you have the bicycle. China needs to get better electric production before trying to replace everybody's legs.

    --
    Help us build a better map!
  147. usa = 5% worlds pop. 85% world greenhouse emission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you do the maths.
    americans need to think twice before commenting on china's likelihood of being green.
    also americans need to look at their own human rights record before commenting on chinas.

  148. Tried one by jeti · · Score: 2, Informative

    I was able to ride a Swiss Flyer on a fair for special bikes.
    And personally, I liked it a lot. You just turn on the power
    assistance and ride it. There are no other controls.

    When you accelerate or climb a slope, the drive kicks in.
    You're hardly aware of it. Instead it feels like you're uber-
    fit. And when you're up to speed, it just behaves like a
    normal bike.

    The model I rode was a city bike. I could imagine to buy
    one for my mother when she doesn't feel fit enough to ride
    a normal one anymore.

    A more sportsy version would be attractive to me.
    (I'm normally riding a good racing bike.)

    Here's the link (swiss/german text only.)

  149. Is it really that many? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >outnumbered normal bikes on the road.

    That looks like something of an exaggeration to me, having just spent several days in Shanghai. I mentioned this /. piece to three colleagues and each of us started keeping our own individual counts of the electric bikes that we saw. Our verdict: electric bikes are between 5 and 10% of all two-wheeled transport on Shanghai's roads.

  150. They are not all that 'green' by bl8n8r · · Score: 1

    As it's plugged in for that 4-6 hour charge time every night, there is a generating station somewhere burning up fossil fuel to juice it. I'll be impressed when I can burn farts to make the thing run.

    --
    boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
  151. Green??? You call that green? by anocow · · Score: 1

    At my previous job we were interested in developing a real electro-hybrid bicycle designed for what many of you mentioned such as better for the environment and exercise option for the elderlies. But this is not what those e-bikes are all about in China. Do you know how they keep the price down? They use lead batteries. These batteries have the life time of about 6 months on everyday use, meaning users will need to buy replacement probably at least once a year. When you talk to the shops and ask them what they do with the batteries that were replaced, they show you to their back room piled to the ceiling with dead ones. Chinese electric bicycle makers have no interest in figuring out a way to recycle or at least dispose of all these dead lead acid batteries. The government doesn't know what to do with them. Lots of lead acid batteries lying around is really good for the envinonment, yea that's for sure.

    And some people may think these are real hybrid bicycles? Think again. Some of these bicycles have pedals where you can, well, pedal your way around. But all of these electric bicycle all have an accelerater on the right handle bar, and you can cruise. We did interviews to ask them whether they pedal or cruise and about 80% said they use the accelerator all the time. We've tried riding these and you'll understand why most of them don't pedal - these bikes are impossible to pedal! You should call these electric scooters cos that's what they really are...

    One thing I learned while spending time there is that things in China is never what it really seems.

  152. Green Transportation? Yes it is green. by rempelos · · Score: 1

    Some of the comments on this article argue that this is not a good solution since they replace a non pollutive vehicle with one more pollutive. I can't believe that most of those comments are voted as insightful, where in fact they show ignorance and very narrow thinking.

    In the modern world the need for everyday transportation increases rapidly, and so is the pace of living in large cities. People just have to move fast and the transition to more efficient transportation is inevitable.

    The high population and poverty in China forced people to develope a better, smarter approach to solve this problem. Nevertheless, this model seems to work fine in China and stands as an example for the rest of world to mimic.

    Another thing I noticed is that some people are wondering why in China and not in the US. For their information, US is the biggest polluter in the world. Bush has not attended to big environmental summits because any result would hurt US economy. As another /.er mentioned here: I soon realized that here in America nobody would ride one of these because of the social implications. Your either such a lazy fat bastard that you need a motor on your bike or your too weak and pathetic to just ride a normal bike or your a broke looser who can't afford a motorcycle or car.

  153. I see a LOT of these things on the road by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

    I have noticed that these things are 99.9% dominated by little girls. I have only seen ONE boy riding there things.

    I'll tell you this, in a few years you will see a HUGE increase in fat women. These little girls aren't getting ANY exercise at all riding these things, they are throwing their bicycles away for there e-bikes.

    With that, the junk food they inhale and sitting around watching the idiot box, they will be fat slobs..

    These things are just an all around BAD idea..

    And besides, who says these things are eco friendly? What of the fossil fuels burned to generate the electricity to charge them??

    If they are charging them with solar cells then I would be impressed, but just saying that it's running on batteries doesn't mean it's 100% clean...

  154. to old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there have been many cars(taxi, bus etc) running with natural gas, eletric bikes have been there in many cities for over a decade. (natural gas cars have been there over 30 years ago).

  155. They've become less Green by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They were much greener when they had non electric bikes. The motors, batteries and electricity use up additional resourcese. I wouldn't really call it a green movement. It's more of a industrialization movement, but in a different direction because they started with different circumstances.

    The US auto market actually started with some electric vehicles too, but the ICE won out at the time because batteries were not as convenient, and gasoline became cheaper.