New Diesel and Petrol Vehicles To Be Banned From 2040 In UK (bbc.com)
New submitter puenktli writes: The UK is joining the list of the countries which are making a commitment towards diesel and petrol free vehicles. Other countries might be more progressive with such a ban (e.g. the Netherlands: by 2025), but at least it's a step in the right direction. However, if new bans are put forward at such a high rate as now, in 2040, the UK might be the only western country where petrol-fuelled cars are still on the road. Tesla at least will be happy about this ban, especially now with their Model 3. But these bans will inspire other car makers as well to invest more in EV. Maybe not such a bad idea after all: oil will run out one day, but the sun will always shine.
oil will run out one day, but the sun will always shine
Maybe another 4 billion years but hardly always.
... assuming the UK is still a first-world nation by 2040.
His movies are not that bad. xXx was fun...
> if new bans are put forward at such a high rate as now, in 2040, the UK might be the only western country where petrol-fuelled cars are still on the road.
they are not banning all petrol fueled cars from being on the road, they are banning the sales of new cars. I drive vehicles over 30 years old (and am looking to move to a different one that's even older)
We'll see what happens to their economies when these bans are ready to take place, I will bet that they end up backing off rather than crippling themselves (or people will end up using a lot more used cars and trucks until they vote the bums out)
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
Electric cars suck. Nobody wants one so the government is forcing you to buy a shit car.
All poverty will be eliminated by 2040. Human lifespans will be 50% longer by 2060. Breast augmentation will be free to all citizens by 2080.
I mean if we're going to promise stupid shit and say it will happen by $FAR_FUTURE_DATE, might as well make them good ones.
"oil will run out one day..."
source?
the UK might be the only western country where petrol-fuelled cars are still on the road
No, the USA will be dead last
Car makers stay profitable by making the same car and selling it around the world (with a few planned modifications, such was flipping the steering wheel, and maybe a renaming). It keeps supply chains simple and amortizes design costs. If major markets in the rest of the world are banning new gas cars by 2025, 2030, or any year before 2040, then the UK won't actually have to do anything. GM isn't going to make an electric cars for other markets, and then have a special gas car for the UK; they'll just stop making gas cars. Legislation or not, by the year 2040 you won't be able to get a new gas car in the UK.
Get 1000 miles a charge no one will want anything else. When its 100,000 a charge in a couple decades there will be nothing else.
Personally I never drive more than 100 miles at a time and that is only because Costco is 45 miles away, so every few months.
We went from 150 to 300 plus miles in 2 years without giga factories and such. Much like a computer CPU this is now technology and antique combustion cars will be like the model A you see now from time to time.
Just like Wright Brothers to NASA.
Time marches on with or without you.
Some analysts are already predicting that the car market will be 50% EV by the mid-2020s, and will "tip" rapidly thereafter. This trend is mostly driven by the cost of Li-ion batteries, which has been falling at about 15%/yr for the last couple of decades. When it becomes possible to buy an entry-level EV for $20k or less, why would you even want an ICE vehicle?
The "fuel" price for EVs is a fraction of that for ICE, as is the maintenance cost. EVs only have a couple-dozen moving parts, compared to thousands in an ICE car. Of course, there will still be "gas car" enthusiasts in 2040, just as there are hobbyists who still maintain antique steam-powered farm equipment. But even by 2030, there will no longer be a need for this law, because the market will already have flipped.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve your problem, you're not using enough of it. --AC
What if this global warming thing is a big hoax and we make a better world for nothing?! ;)
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
Even if you're burning gas and diesel at electrical plants to generate the electricity, there has to be some economies of scale at work here to give better efficiency. More than enough to outweigh transmission losses and battery charging losses.
British Petroleum, what do you think of this idea?
You say things that offend me and I can deal with it. Can you?
Why are you citing Tesla in this FS? By 2025 (in 8 years that is), not to say 2040, are you sure the "model 3" will be that new? Can't you name a single European car maker that build electric cars? No, you cite it because of your fucking nationalism. And because you have not a fucking clue of what you are talking about.
At least for USians, a substantial part of the cost of gas or diesel is the tax earmarked for new roads and maintaining existing roads. That the EV owner currently does not pay these taxes could be regarded as a subsidy to encourage use of electric cars, but when EVs are numerous, this will change the fuel-cost calculation, especially against the coming generation of more fuel efficient IC engines.
In other news, rolling coal is alive and well in the US.
limited range, long recharge time, what little infrastructure there is to support it, is typically broken, price, longevity. just off the top of my head
Depends on what you need.
Almost all of my driving is around town, and it turns out that this is actually very typical-- most people use cars for mostly short trips. Actually, a ten mile range would be fine for me-- we're a two-car family, so it would be practical to have one car used for most of our uses, and when we do need longer range, we could use the other.
I have a perfectly good ten-year-old car, so I don't need a new car now-- but when I replace it, an electric car makes sense.
The take-away lesson is that different people have different needs for which they use their car.
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
Like leaving the Europe or reintroducing diesel engine vehicles! Meh!
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
How many new power plants do they estimate they will have to build, to power all of these electric cars? That's a huge amount of power generation moved into central locations. With about 65% of that energy lost in transmission, that number doubles. source: http://insideenergy.org/2015/1... How does more than doubling the amount of energy it takes to run vehicles save the environment? Unless someone is building a solar grid the size of Britain, I don't see this all coming from renewable sources.
We'll see what happens to their economies when these bans are ready to take place, I will bet that they end up backing off rather than crippling themselves (or people will end up using a lot more used cars and trucks until they vote the bums out)
I don't see any reason why not selling petrol cars would "cripple" Britain. You do know that it's a tiny little island by American standards of distance-- all of the U.K. is still a little smaller than Michigan-- and few people drive long distances. As far as I can see, it's a great location for electric cars.
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
the UK might be the only western country where petrol-fuelled cars are still on the road
No, the USA will be dead last
You're assuming the USA as a nation will survive the current presidency
2040 is far enough off that the current politicians can make all the promises they want and not suffer any repercussions from failing to meet that goal nor any backlash from folks who object.
2040 is also far enough off that we might reasonably make the transition from fossil fuels by then as that is a long time in technological terms.
On the other hand, I have 1968, 1986, 1996 and 2004 delivery vans and there is not a whole lot of difference between them. They all get about the same gas mileage. In fact, they get about the same mileage full or empty. The biggest thing you can do when driving a larger vehicle is make sure you're always carrying at capacity for this reason. It's called backhauling. When we make deliveries we also pickup up spent barley and such for our pastured pig farm to optimize our time and vehicle usage. That makes more difference than doubling the gas mileage.
In Vermont, where we're located, they aren't quite as optimistic as the UK politicians so they set the deadline for this sort of thing to be 2050 to give another decade of slack.
...With about 65% of that energy lost in transmission, that number doubles.
source: http://insideenergy.org/2015/1...
65% loss?!? What do you think they are they using to transmit, wet string?
The link you cite says "Energy lost in transmission and distribution: About 6% – 2% in transmission and 4% in distribution".
But Britain's a small place, and they don't wheel power thousands of miles (they don't have thousands of miles), so I expect a smaller number is appropriate.
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
When can I buy my autonomous, AI infused, molecular powered quadrupedal vehicle? We need genetically engineered horses and mules that come with a passenger compartment on the top.
When electric vehicles can be recharged within 5 mins, can reach 180 km/h, and can run for 500 km without recharging then we can talk, not before.
Get over yourself. Half of America thought the same thing about the last president. These hysterics you've worked yourself into aren't helpful.
(And this is coming from someone who doesn't particularly like Trump)
> Because they have limited range, take too long to charge
Mostly this, right, trying to do a 1600km (1000 miles) trip in an ICE vehicle? I can do it with just 2 tanks of gas in 16h. However with an AV?
I don't know how you would do a 1600km (1000 mile) trip within Britain in any kind of car, electric or petrol. Unless it floats.
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
This may be a very good thing for air quality... but there are some significant logistical challenges to overcome if people are actually going to be able to charge their vehicles. Firstly, the UK simply doesn't have the power generation capacity to support several million electric vehicles. Our current capacity overhead is around 1% in winter. Coal-fired stations have reached end of life and are being closed rapidly, and a lot of the nuclear plant is reaching end of life too. The one new plant at Hinkley Point has taken decades to get off the ground, and it seems highly unlikely that the UK will be able to commission enough generation capacity in time for the 2040 deadline.
Second - a good deal of the housing stock in the UK only has on-street parking, which rules out charging vehicles at home. It simply isn't practical to run extension leads across pavements. Some people end up parking a fair distance from their house too. If you're lucky enough to have a driveway, then that's great... until you realise that the electrical grid in a lot of places is already at capacity. It can't cope with the extra load, and will need to be upgraded. Bear in mind that most of the low-voltage grid is underground, and you realise that you're looking at decades of roadworks.
Third - the government has suggested that the 5,000 or so conventional filling stations will be replaced with 5,000 or so fast chargers. This sounds great... until you realise that it isn't possible to charge a car in the 90 seconds or so that it takes to fill up a car with petrol or diesel. It takes (at best) an hour or longer, so way, way more charging stations will be required. Where are we going to put them? The UK is very short of space in towns and cities.
It's a great announcement in principle, but for me, these points need to be planned for too. It simply isn't possible to ban new petrol and diesel cars without putting the necessary infrastructure in place. And it may not be possible to put it in place at all.
Us the 3ourtesy are looking very if you move a table fact there won't
Cancer is what real progress looks like.
Foolish! If I can not fuel my vehicle from my own fuel storage, then I am reliant upon failing governments to provide fueling stations in all areas I travel, including rural areas. 1) Governments fail at even the simpilist things. 2) Electrical vehicles in rural and mountainous areas where there are no electric re-fueling stations is not practical. 3) Hydrogen vehicles are not safe as they blow up in a wreck. 4) Liquid Propane is too expensive to fuel vehicles. and there are so many more reasons this list is a list of foolish democrat / progressive countries to NOT live in!!
Hoorah! Freedom first! We'll get tourists to come here to drive our zoomy gas powered cars instead of their insipid little rolling warts. If their governments mandate electrics, you know after a few years they'll start pressuring on performance and power in the name of saving energy and children...
Half of America thought the same thing about the last president.
Yes, this did. That said, their reasoning was pretty terrible.
People who say "sheeple" have about as much sophistication as an AOL user, and in fact are probably actually AOL users.
If they were serous about AGW, they'd ban the sale of new IC engines starting in 2018, not 2040. Haven't we been told by every scientist that it's probably already too late to do anything about global warming (er, climate change). Why delay this planet-saving measure for 20+ years? Even the more "progressive" Ntherlands starting in 2025? Why wait?
Isn't slashdot bombarded almost daily with postings telling us the solar & wind have overtaken oil on cost curve? Why wait?
You make a good point, but:
If electric cars were a better deal than non-electric cars for UKers, you would not have to get the government's guys with guns to force them to buy electric vehicles at gunpoint...
Ah, you must be a libertarian. Pretty much everything that's in the news, you can count on libertarians saying "OMG, it's the government with guns forcing people at gunpoint! "
(I like the way you put "guns" in the sentence twice there. Nice way to hammer the point.)
If you're going a long distance, take a train.
They do still have trains in Britain, you know.
And when I get to my destination, how will I drive around?
Zipcar.
If you live that close to work, WALK IT.
Because your version of hysteria seems to be only from you and fellow AGW and reality deniers.
So why the claim that the UK would be the only "western" country with petrol (gas or diesel) cars?
It is 17 years since they rebranded as an energy company, and changed BP to stand for "Beyond Petroleum".
And for good reason. As I understand it, Americans tend to drive longer distances on a regular basis. I think we'll settle down to a large majority of hybrids, though.
Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
Look, Tesla sells out their entire production run. They literally can't make enough electric cars. Ford makes many multiples of electric cars that Tesla makes. BMW does too.
And they all pale in comparison to China, which literally makes electric cars for $6000 each. In quantities that dwarf the US and UK output.
Adapt. The market cares nothing for your failed fossil fuel religion.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
By then, they will isolated in their little island, making sure that their population remains pure and flawless. Whatever they do will be of little relevance to the rest of us.
It will be 'You will get my internal combustion engine car when you pry it out of my cold dead hands." You might just as well try to get Muricans to quit playing with guns.
No reason why the USA can't beat Canada then. Warmer climate and similar, if not smaller distances.
But anyways, USians just have to drive less, or smaller cars. Raising taxes on gas would be a good first step instead of giving inefficient subsidies and hoping people will choose small cars and hybrids.
no one wants to travel to a foreign land for bad food, worse weather, and to top it all off, drive on the wrong side of the road.
Not in Britain for sure, but in north america it's common.... For instance Québec -> Toronto is 800km
Sure, but the article we are commenting on is "New Diesel and Petrol Vehicles To Be Banned From 2040 In UK"
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
In the copper industry and train an as electrician.
When everyone buys an EV, there's going to be a lot of work out there re-wiring houses to cope with the charging of these cars.
My house only has a 60A main breaker - the entire house can only supply 14.4kW, including heating, hot water, cooking, lighting, etc.
None of the internal wiring can handle more than 30A, and that run is just for the oven.
I suppose aluminium and steel would be a good investment too, for both the manufacturing of these new cars and the high voltage transmissions lines that are going to need to be upgraded.
Cars are tough enough.
Let's see a single electric semi-truck (lorry) or construction vehicle before we make this categorical switch, shall we?
In any case, I find it amusing that this is being declared 'groundbreaking'....apparently France doesn't exist in their universe: https://www.theguardian.com/bu...
(France declared the SAME policy weeks ago.)
-Styopa
Assuming a complete infrastructure crash, it would probably be easier to produce your own electricity than gasoline. Biodiesel may be an option, but newer cars need a fair amount of work to convert them over or all the emissions controls get clogged.
...than governments (and faceless bureaucrats) making proclamations about what they'll do in 20+ years. They barely know what they're doing before the next news cycle.
Back in 2010 or so Chrysler was starting to promote the ChryslerEV line. Unfortunately it never happened.
I think one of the concepts was a vehicle with an all electric drivetrain but it had a small, very high efficiency diesel engine that could run a generator and keep the batteries charged. The diesel ran at one speed (where it was most efficient) when needed since all it did was run the generator, which fed an inverter.
I would seriously still like this style of not-hybrid bybrid as an option. I doubt the EPA would allow it (because it would work, would solve many shortcomings of current EVs, and would normalize small diesels on American roads, which the EPA seems to be dead set against).
Ah well... I'll think about something with a Cummins in it instead. Because...
Its funny after reading through much of the above. A lot of people wouldn't mind, or might actually like an electric car, given some reasonable specs and capabilities at a comparable price. And perhaps a common American trait that I expect is even now not too uncommon elsewhere: a car that isn't being mandated or shoved down their throat. Some might have principled stands against the taxpayer funded 'incentive credits' and would buy said cars (at a comparable price) without them.
But so many of the posters are all 'ban the gas/diesel cars! Force them to buy electric!" and/or "Raise taxes on gas/diesel to drive them into buying EVs". Wow, authoritarian much? How do so many people think what they want should be imposed on others by government force, and that people who disagree or want markets (people!) to decide instead of governments or bureaucrats...are somehow deficient and need to be told what to do? Where are all these authoritarian controlling wannabe dictators coming from?
Sheesh.
Europeans are very good at taxing people, why the hang up here. Tax fossil fuels at sufficient level to bring down use to desired threshold. Let people keep using it in high value situations where it makes sense. Use the added revenue to cut back on some other taxes like VAT.
Same for United States. Tax gasoline, use the revenue to give people a break on sales taxes. Why is it so difficult and why do we inact paternalistic regulations instead?
While 3+ billion people drive far more polluting cars in developing nations let's get our swipes in on the US, that'll make us look smart and not at all like retarded dicks!
We're converting our Hummers to burn coal. That's some forward thinking there!
I wonder what all the coal miners who voted for Trump are going to think of him when they find out that being a coal miner is a preexisting condition for which there will be no insurance coverage to help ease their suffering from black lung.
Make 'murica great agin!
It typically is.
No. Per POTUS, we're switching to coal.
If you drive, or think that ANYONE is capable of competently completing, 16 hours of driving without a significant break, then you are a complete and utter BASTARD ! :)
You are a major danger on the roads, putting other peoples' lives at unacceptable risk.
And you chatter about it as if it were "normal behavior".
I don't know you, I don't know your family or friends, but I hope you die quietly by yourself one day, and don't take out an innocent family in a sedan travelling in the other direction. And that you die BEFORE you next attempt to drive 1600 km in one day.
Professional drivers are legally prevented from doing what you so flippantly extol.
Actually, I shouldn't call you a bastard, that's not fair.
Your're a FUCKWIT, even with your "impressively" low user ID.
Shame on you. You don't deserve a driver's licence.
If Ford could make an electric F150 that had a generator dock in the bed for long trips, 98% of the concerns Americans have with EVs would be moot. Go rent a well maintained generator from your local dealership (could also work with a small trailer attachment for sedans) and be on your way.
My point is not (should I put "not" in caps?) whether or not taxing liquid fuels is a good way to fund roads.
My point is that the cost of liquid fuels already contains a tax, a fee, a charge to pay for the roads and if you are going to make a comparison between the energy cost of operating an EV vs an IC engine car, you need to take that fee into account.
I don't have any problem that the small number of EV users are effectively exempted from paying this tax. We can argue the merits of subsidy, but for now, that exemption is a subsidy, and such helps push EVs and EV ownership along the cost curve. But when EVs become ubiquitous, EV owners will have to contribute to the cost of the roads by whatever administrative arrangement to pay for roads is enacted, and this will change somewhat the economics of EV vs IC operation.
As to IC engines being at the edge of no further progress, you shall see significant progress with the next generation of small displacement highly turbocharged high compression engines already in the product development pipeline. At least under the Obama Administration, there was a road map (to excuse the pun) of substantial increases in the fuel efficiency standards in the next 10 years, and yes, those regs were informed by scientific and engineering input regarding the momentum of research on improved IC engines.
New Diesel and Petrol Vehicles To Be Banned From 2040 In UK
"Coal" conspicuously absent from ban.
From the author's UK perspective, I'm not sure if the USA are west or east ... they're in the back.