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Quote from: alancalverd on 24/04/2021 21:00:47Fine, however you want to view it. But the taxpayer pays, so are you happy to subsidise my business mileage? No, I'm happy to tax it.
Fine, however you want to view it. But the taxpayer pays, so are you happy to subsidise my business mileage?
So you are going to tax all vehicles by mileage? Neat idea, but is it practicable and enforceable?
Quote from: alancalverd on 25/04/2021 11:41:58So you are going to tax all vehicles by mileage? Neat idea, but is it practicable and enforceable?What about taxing based on polluting gases released?
Looking at the financial aspect, wind turbines cost about £1 per peak watt, so by the time we have installed enough turbines and secure grid capacity for 30,000,000 cars we are looking at around £10 per useful watt,
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 25/04/2021 16:10:52Quote from: alancalverd on 25/04/2021 11:41:58So you are going to tax all vehicles by mileage? Neat idea, but is it practicable and enforceable?What about taxing based on polluting gases released?Yes, the idea of taxing polluting gas released does have an appeal, but could it be enforced on internet forums
Quote from: alancalverd on 25/04/2021 11:41:58Looking at the financial aspect, wind turbines cost about £1 per peak watt, so by the time we have installed enough turbines and secure grid capacity for 30,000,000 cars we are looking at around £10 per useful watt,The capacity factor of wind turbines built today is ~0.35-0.4, so it's more like $2.5 per watt (average), so you're out by a factor of 4 already, and all the conclusions you drew from this $10 value, are wrong.
If we want to replace all fossil fuel use we will need another 50 GW to replace domestic and industrial gas heating,
Here's the "greenwash" clincher. Read the Polestar website https://www.polestar.com/uk/polestar-2 It's a truly lovely medium-size all-electric car, and according to the manufacturer, it takes 26.2 tonnes of CO2 emission to make one. I could drive over 100,000 miles in my diesel car and emit less CO2 than that.
Agreed hydrogen is the ideal means of storing energy that has been generated by....er.....magic?
The point is that (1) I (and 29,999,999 others) already have a perfectly functional car
The big advantage of steam-engines is that they don't need any special fuels like petroleum or diesel. Anything combustible will do. Such as wood, rags, or even bundles of old newspapers. These will suffice to heat the boiler.
As I said earlier, the time to introduce electric cars is 150 years ago.
Then power supply might have evolved to meet demand and the demand would have levelled off at the point where the power supply was sustainable.
Starting now, with the intention to completely replace fossil-fuelled cars, they will be an economic and environmental embarrassment .
That's funny, because that's pointedly NOT what the national grid ever say, for example: