If you generate the electricity with coal. Generate it with wind or solar
and it's a different story.

 

From: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com [mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com]
On Behalf Of wgm4u
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2012 1:15 PM
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Hey Rick-Electric cars dirtier than gasoline
cars!?!

 

  

[          ] 

 

                

Why Electric Cars Are More Polluting than Gas Guzzlers - at Least in China


Electric cars are all the rage in China, but they may not be helping to
clean up the environment or protect human health from pollution.

By Alice Park <http://healthland.time.com/author/apark7/>  | @aliceparkny
<http://www.twitter.com/aliceparkny>  | February 14, 2012 | +
<http://healthland.time.com/2012/02/14/why-electric-cars-are-more-polluting-
than-gas-guzzlers-at-least-in-china/#disqus_thread> 

inShare1

 VisionsofAmerica/Joe Sohm / Getty Images
<http://timewellness.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/e008006ecarscrop.jpg?w=600&;
h=400&crop=1> 

VisionsofAmerica/Joe Sohm / Getty Images

It's unspoken, but every driver gliding around town behind the wheel of a
Prius is thinking the same thing: "I'm saving the planet. What are you
doing, you dirty-fossil-fuel burner?"

What's implied is that hybrid or electric-car drivers are also saving human
lives, since the fuel-burning internal combustion engines that power
conventional vehicles emit carbon dioxide and fine particulate matter
including acids, organic chemicals as well as dust and soil; this pollution
has been linked to respiratory and heart problems and cancer.

But, according to a new study published in the journal Environmental Science
& Technology, it turns out that the use of electric vehicles may not be that
clean after all, particularly in the world's most populated country, China.

In the study, Christopher Cherry, an assistant professor of civil and
environmental engineering at University of Tennessee, and his colleagues
found that in terms of air pollution, electric vehicles were more harmful to
public health per kilometer traveled than gasoline-powered cars. That's
right - the electrically powered cars turned out to be dirtier than those
with internal combustion engines.

VIDEO: Turning Old Gas Guzzlers Into Electric Vehicles
<http://www.time.com/time/video/player/0,32068,990054967001_2077261,00.html>


How could that be? Cherry says there's been an implicit assumption that
because electric cars don't burn fossil fuels, they're cleaner for the
environment and safer for people, but that doesn't take into account how the
electricity they use is generated. In China, that would be from - you
guessed it - fossil fuels. About 85% of the country's electricity is powered
by fossil fuels, of which 95% is coal.

"It's tricky comparing electric vehicle emissions with emissions from
internal combustion engines, because you can't compare the emissions," says
Cherry. "With gasoline engines, a 1-1 change in emissions results in a 1-1
change in health outcomes because the emissions are released in the same
place where people inhale them."

That's not the case with electric cars, whose dirty emissions are released
at the electricity-generating power plant, while the vehicle is used
elsewhere. It's this disconnect that has given electric vehicles an
apparently cleaner bill for health, but Cherry says that once you factor in
how many people within the range of electricity generating power plants are
affected by emissions, the story gets a little dirtier. In China's case,
pollution from electricity plants is spreading exposure to potentially
harmful particulates in the air from urban populations to those in more
remote rural regions.

Kilometer per kilometer, electric cars in China beat out conventional
vehicles as among the worst environmental polluters. On average, the fine
particulate emissions per passenger-km are 3.6 times greater for electric
cars than for gasoline cars. That's better than for diesel cars but on par
with diesel buses, which can spread their environmental impact across the
number of passengers they carry. "If we compare gasoline car emissions to
electric car emissions, the electric cars look very, very bad," says Cherry.
"So the point is that you have to consider the emissions exposure when the
exposure source is far apart - the electrical power plant as opposed to the
tailpipe of a car."

MORE: 6 New Developments in the World of Electric Cars
<http://moneyland.time.com/2011/07/20/6-new-developments-in-the-world-of-ele
ctric-cars/> 

The problem is that the Chinese government, in a well-intentioned effort to
promote more eco-friendly power use, has been pushing electric cars
<http://ecocentric.blogs.time.com/2011/04/20/how-china-can-take-the-wheel-on
-electric-cars/> , motorcycles and scooters in recent years. The effort has
been so successful that electric bike ownership is surging at 86% annual
growth. There are now 100 million electric bikes on China's roads, and they
outnumber gas-powered cars 2-to-1.

The good news is that while electric cars didn't fare so well in reducing
emissions, electric bikes and scooters - which typically use one-tenth the
electricity of the cars - did a lot better. The researchers found that
e-bike usage improved air quality and environmental health by displacing the
use of larger, more polluting vehicles.

There's also some hope in China's changing energy policies; cities in the
southwest have adopted cleaner electricity generating power sources, and
generally release fewer emissions than those in the northeast. Cherry notes
also that electricity generation in the U.S. is cleaner than it is in China,
which means that the impact of electric car use in the two countries can't
be compared. But the results highlight an important lesson not just for
China but for anyone eager to scale up alternative energy production as a
way to benefit both man and the planet.

"China has a lot more room for improvement in its power sector, and the
lowest hanging fruit would be to clean up its power sector first," says
Cherry, rather than focusing on lowering vehicle emissions. Once that
happens, he says, "electric cars will have room to gain on conventional cars
in the long run."

Alice Park is a writer at TIME. Find her on Twitter at @aliceparkny
<http://twitter.com/#%21/aliceparkny> . You can also continue the discussion
on TIME's Facebook page <http://www.facebook.com/time>  and on Twitter at
@TIME <http://twitter.com/#%21/TIME> .

 
<http://healthland.time.com/2012/02/14/why-electric-cars-are-more-polluting-
than-gas-guzzlers-at-least-in-china/#ixzz1mNvdjMJp> MJp



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