redwards
Student
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2005
- Messages
- 49
This is actually what I was referring to. You might argue a bit about losses in power transmission or emissions incurred from extracting, refining and shipping oil vs. coal, but there are a ton of variables there. Oil is often shipped from overseas and has to be refined, coal mining results in blowing off mountain tops, etc. Let's call this a wash just for the sake of argument right now.And if part of the justification for electric cars is to reduce the production of CO2 have you taken into account the fact that per joule of energy produced the burning of coal produces more CO2 than gasoline?
So let's see here. The Chevy Volt uses 36 kWh of energy per 100 miles in all-electric mode. The average coal-fired power plant emits 2,249 lbs/MWh of carbon dioxide, which is 2.249 lbs/kWh.
This means that the Chevy Volt would produce 80.964 pounds of carbon dioxide per 100 mile trip if it were power exclusively by power from a coal-fired powerplant. That comes out to 0.81 pounds per mile. By contrast, the average passenger car produces 0.916 pounds of CO2 per mile (this is only the average passenger car, light trucks produce more, and big ****-off SUVs produce even more). All of the figures used above come from the EPA; I can throw up the links if you care to double-check.
So a Chevy Volt is cleaner than a passenger car even if we presume the Volt relies exclusively on energy from a coal-fired power plant. Considering that coal provides something like half of our nation's power, and that the other half produces varyingly lower levels of carbon dioxide emission, I think it's pretty safe to say that an electric fleet would produce fewer carbon dioxide emissions than the current gasoline fleet.
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