Plug-in Electrical Vehicles
By Bruno De Wachter / Published on Tue, 2007-08-21 07:30Further reading
Taking the edge off four classical counter-arguments
Over the years, electrical vehicles have been the object of much scepticism, even outright slander. The battle between believers and non-believers has been intense. Today, plug-in electrical vehicles are close to a commercial breakthrough. The all-electrical Tesla Roadster is planned for launch on the market later this year. GM’s Chevrolet Volt and Toyota’s FT-HS (Future Toyota Hybrid Sport), which are both plug-in hybrids, are in development phase.
Suddenly, it looks like the edge has been taken off the four major counter-arguments:
- The power and capacity of the batteries will be too small
- The high voltage battery will present safety problems
- Electrical vehicles only transpose the emissions to power stations
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The electrical network will not be able to meet demand
1) The power and capacity of the batteries will be too small
The Tesla Roadster is proving the opposite. Its lithium-ion battery delivers up to 200 kW of electrical power and can store about 56 kWh of electrical energy. The electrical driving range of the Tesla Roadster will be about 200 miles without recharging and, as the battery technology gets better, this mileage will almost certainly continue to increase.
2) The high voltage battery will present safety problems
The battery pack of the Tesla Roadster will work at 375 volts. During its design, particular attention has been paid to the multiple safety systems. Everything has been done to ensure safety. It is expected that the Tesla Roadster will easily pass all U.S. Federal Motor Vehicle Standards required tests. This involves crashing of complete cars with fully charged battery packs.
3) Electrical vehicles only transpose the emissions to power stations
Power stations are still far from emission free, but the average power station is much less CO2 intensive than the average internal combustion motor. Two recent studies by the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) and the Natural Resources Defence Council (NRDC) confirm this fact. They show that widespread use of plug-in electrical vehicles in the U.S. would significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Different scenarios for the year 2050 were calculated:
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A high CO2 intensity for the electricity sector (25% increase by 2050), a medium CO2 intensity (4% decrease) and a low CO2 intensity (85% decrease)
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A low penetration of electrical vehicles on the market (20%), a medium penetration (62%) and a high penetration (80%)
The results show that even in the scenario with a low market penetration and a high CO2 intensity of power stations, electrical vehicles would still save 163 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions annually.
4) The electrical network will not be able to meet demand
A recent study by the University of Leuven (KU Leuven) in Belgium shows that the impact of plug-in electrical vehicles on the electrical grid would not be as large as commonly assumed. A market penetration of about 30% by 2030 would raise electricity demand in Belgium by 5.1%. That is certainly not a negligible figure, and it has to be added to other expected increases in demand for electricity. It would require some additional infrastructure, but on the other hand, this figure is certainly not beyond the reach of the electrical power sector.
The study 'The Consumption of Electrical Energy of Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle in Belgium' was presented at the European Ele-Drive Conference in Brussels (May 30 – June 1, 2007).
References
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The Web site of Tesla Motors
- The study 'The Consumption of Electrical Energy of Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle in Belgium' by KU Leuven, presented at the European Ele-Drive Conference in Brussels (May 30 – June 1, 2007)
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Comments
Power stations are still far from emission free...
By Ward Miller / Published on Tue, 2007-12-11 17:17Power stations are still far from emission free... that's why with an electric car it's important to pick a "green" or renewable energy company that supplies you with electricity. Buying electricity from a "green" electricity supplier makes excellent sense when you an electric or battery powered vehicle.
Reply
Plug-in electric vehicles
By Import Parts / Published on Fri, 2009-01-30 3:31 Vehicle design will change, and simplify: gearboxes and transmissions will disappear as the electric motors that ultimately drive the wheels are built into the wheels themselves. There need be no separate disk brakes, as touching the brake pedal switches these motors into generator mode, allowing the energy of the vehicle’s motion as it slows to be converted back into electricity to be stored in the batteries rather than being wasted as heat, and to lock the wheels when it is stopped.Reply
Expensive
By Kustomatic / Published on Tue, 2009-02-03 7:08 I think electric cars are not as good a fuel since they got high maintenance cost. Let say Audi build an electric car. How much will the audi parts will cost? and we all know some parts of electric is different from fuel engines.Reply