by The_Toecutter » Sun 08 Oct 2006, 17:13:08
Why are automakers going for H2 over electricity?
a) Fuel cells are decades away from commercial viability in automotive applications. If mass produced today, a fuel cell stack would exceed $300 per peak horsepower. This doesn't include the electric motor, inverter, hydrogen storage medium, fuel cell membrane, batteries, the chassis, just the fuel cell stack by itself. Toyota hopes a mass produced fuel cell car could be ~$50,000 by 2020, but it cites this as being optimistic. Fuel cell cars are a means to greenwash the company while allowing continued sales of inefficient, very profitable vehicles in the meantime.
b) H2 allows continued use of the internal combustion engine. In fact, we could have had H2 ICE cars 30 years ago, but due to storage issues, range would have been worse than a lead acid powered electric car.
c) H2 would be expensive. If everything goes right, around $2.00/kg wholesale, with 1 kg having about the same energy content as a gallon of gasoline. $2.00/kg wholesale translates to about $3.00 at the pump or more. This allows the oil industry to keep raking in money if we ever do switch to hydrogen, as producing enough to run a car in your own home and purchasing the equipment to fill your car would not be feasible for most. Meanwhile, electricity is everwhere, and even if you produce your own via solar or wind, it would STILL be cheaper to run an electric car off of it than to purchase gas so long as gas is above $1.50/gallon or so.
d) Hydrogen is easier to regulate than electricity. This way, our overbloated government can keep making as much tax revenue as they desire.
e) The DOE intends to get H2 from oil
Lets look at the facts:
-The G8 nations make more tax revenue off of oil than OPEC makes in profit. Electric cars are a threat to this.
-Automobile fuel by itself accounts for more than 40% of America's oil consumption. Electric cars are a threat to this.
-The auto industry makes about 50% of their profits from aftermarket parts and repairs, and most of that comes from the maintenance whore known as the internal combustion engine. Electric cars are a threat to this.
There is a conflict of interest here. The consumer would like one thing(cheaper motoring, cleaner environment, less oil wars, increased autonomy), but the corporations and government want another(increased revenue, increased control).
The world's corporations and governments do not care how peak oil will affect everyone else. They merely want to make as much money as possible, even if it may result in a big dieoff. They don't care about peak oil's affects on the majority, they don't care about global warming, they don't care about oil wars, they don't care about how poverty results in more population; they want to maximize profit. They will stifle any alternatives to oil that threaten to reduce the money they make, as oil itself has been shown to be the most profitable of energy sources, even if it may not be the cheapest or best suited for a given application. They want growth, and use of those currently viable alternatives over oil will cause contraction from reduced consumer spending and reduced resource consumption for a given living standard.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')veryone knows what's involved with electrics and the public has clearly said they don't like it.
Actually, the public clearly demonstrated that they wanted access to this technology.
A study titled "The Current and Future Market for Electric Vehicles" found that the immediate market for an electric car with 80+ miles range(and an acknowledged reduced range in cold weather), the capability to reach freeway speeds, and a price similar to comparable gasoline powered cars was 12-18% with a 95% confidence interval. In the state of California alone, this was well over 150,000 cars.
When study was done, the NiMH EV1 did 140-160 miles range, performed better than most gas cars(0-60 mph in 7.5 seconds), and would've been ~$30k in mass production. Solectria Force NiMH: 180-200 miles range, Solectria Sunrise: 350 miles range, RAV4 EV: 120 miles range. NiMH: no range loss in cold. The range and battery were there. But no one mass produced the cars to make them affordable. Small businesses who wanted to mass produce EVs didn't have economies of scale to do it. The large businesses with economies of scale refused to mass produce EVs.
If that's not enough, there's a few things you should know about GM's EV1.
GM only sold few hundred EV1s because they refused to make more than that. EV1s were hardly even advertised, few Californians heard or knew of them, let alone America as a whole. GM refused to even sell them, only leased them, when most were seeking to buy. GM ignored thousands with cash on hand. Complained they only got 50 willing 'buyers' after weeding out all who didn't have an engineering background, didn't make $100k+ income, didn't have a home in the right city, were EV hobbyists or enthusiasts, and didn't have perfect credit. GM only made the cars available at two dealerships, who actively discouraged people from trying to 'buy' the cars. Two dealerships only is intentionally preventing commercial viability. GM complains about no one making replacement parts, but it isn't practical to make spare parts for a few hundred cars. GM claims to regret crushing the cars, but ignored thousands of letters urging the cars not to be crushed. GM charged lessees thousands for minor scratches, before crushing the cars. $500 million of the $1 billion spent in 'development costs' was spent lobbying politicians to kill the EV mandate and spent on an anti-EV ad campaign. All but a few of the cars were crushed, despite lessees willing to waive all liability and offering over the residual value of the cars.
There were thousands of people who wanted to buy or lease an EV1, and GM wouldn't even sell to them. This was with virtually no advertising, when > 95% of Americans never even heard of an EV1 at the time.
A Toyota RAV4 EV recently went on Ebay for over $60,000, well above Toyota's inflated sales price. Tesla has sold out its initial run of 100 Tesla Roadsters in under 2 weeks.
A family sedan powered by batteries with 300 mile range, 0-60 mph in 8 seconds could have been done for $20k since the late 90s/early 2000s if there were mass production.
www.evuk.co.uk/EAVES_BEV_VS_FCV%20040703.pdf
www.ipd.anl.gov/anlpubs/2000/05/36138.pdf
But the big automakers refuse to mass produce electric cars.
Today? We can have 200-300 mile range cars that have no special attention to aerodynamics or weight reduction, and in theory, if we did pay attention to those things more, range could exceed 700 miles per charge(although no one has built such a car yet). I recall the NiMH pack in the Solectria Sunrise only being about 30 kWh, which got it well over 300 miles range from such good efficiency. he Sunrise was capable of seating 4 adults, it was a midsize car with clean aerodynamics and a composite body. The Tesla Roadster, which only has a 250 mile range, has a ~50 kWh pack. Today, electric cars can do 0-60 mph in 3 seconds if designed for it.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson