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My Tesla Model S
Image from Locky's English Playground |
Everyone who visit this blog often knows that I am an environmentalist and animal right advocate from the start. Recently, my dearest friends are questioning my decision to own an EV (Tesla Model S 60kWh).
Arguments include:
- "EV is at best an alternative form, not an effective reducer, of pollution, when societies are still relying on traditional sources of energy. Encouraging greater use of environmentally friendly means of mass transportation may be a more effective way."
- "In a country that relies heavily on green sources of energy, EVs make sense. Till then, what EVs do is just shifting, not reducing, pollution."
- "you can have all cars as EVs. But if your EVs are running on evergy generated by say, fossil fuels, you're back to square 1"
- "Your EVs are using the energy generated inefficiently upstream in the first place. You can't compare bread with flour."
Ignoring
all benefits of electricity as a vehicle fuel just for the moment, there are two aspects to answering all these questions -- scientific and personal.
Scientifically, none of the arguments above are wrong. In response to 1), "EV is at best an alternative form, not an effective reducer, of pollution, when societies are still relying on traditional sources of energy. Encouraging greater use of environmentally friendly means of mass transportation may be a more effective way", Everyone knows that EV does not offer sustainable energy production such as solar, wind and water, what it does is to offer a mean to sustainable energy consumption to tap into these renewable energies, which traditional ICE vehicles can never do. This is one of the top reasons why we should switch to EVs in the long run along with the increase in the use of renewable energies.
People in Hong Kong are no strangers to EVs, broadly speaking, the mass transit railway (MTR) is a kind of EV too, encouraging more people to take MTR is definitely a more effective way because the math can be calculated power use (W) per passenger per distance unit (km), so fitting more people into the same number of trains will lower the W/passenger-km. This friend stationed in Singapore shared
SMRT's document,
"We can achieve a more sustainable transport system if more Singaporeans travel by public transport. Public transport is, by far, the more efficient mode of transport, both in terms of land and energy use. A single-deck bus transports up to 80 passengers while an average passenger car only carries up to 5 persons. A car carrying only the driver uses 9 times the energy used by a bus and 12 times that used by a train, on a per passenger-kilometre travelled basis. " (p.58)
Using this for our calculation, if an Internal combustion engine (ICE) car carrying on the driver uses 12 times the energy used by a train on a per passenger-km travelled basis with
a 35% energy efficiency at best, while an EV can be greater than 90% energy efficient, then that means an EV is at least 2.57 times more energy efficient than an ICE car, which supports the ICE-to-EV comparison that EV is superior to ICE vehicles in terms of energy efficiency.
This brings us to a train-to-EV energy efficiency ration of 12 : 2.57 = 4.67 : 1. So yes, for the case of SMRT, it is more energy efficient than EV.
But I don't agree this to be the case for Hong Kong's MTR trains until I get hold of more statistics. My friend thinks that I am just arguing for the sake of arguing, as a researcher myself, what I do not want is to come to an early assumed answer as my reply because I do realise running a train system requires more energy than that in moving trains.
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Image from the Standard |
Way back in 2007, Green Sense (環保觸覺) has already made it official that MTR is a ridiculously energy wasting company.
The Standard reported,
"51 of the 53 MTR stations across the territory in July. It found about 48,000 fluorescent tubes (光管) were used for more than 6,500 advertising boxes... It also checked 29 Kowloon-Canton Railway stations and found 16,400 fluorescent tubes were used to light up advertising boxes... MTR stations switched on from 6am to 1am every day is wasteful as the energy consumption (消耗) is enormous (龐大的). The same amount of energy could be used to light up 76,000 homes a night, assuming that every family switches on two fluorescent tubes for six hours a day"
So how much energy is wasted? Assuming conservatively that each fluorescent tube is of 50W, energy used for JUST advertising boxes in all stations each day is
50W x (48,000+16,400) tubes x 19 hours = 61,180kWh
Considering Tesla Model S 85kWh battery, the energy used in these advertising boxes can charge a 85kW Model S for 61,180kWh/85kWh = 719.8 = 719 Tesla Model S 85kWh each day, which is equivalent to 719 x 400km = 287,600km of range per day!
FYI, data from
the Environmental Protection Department shows that as at end of November 2014, there are 1213 EVs in use in Hong Kong, quite likely 70% of this are Tesla EVs. Which means, the electricity use by MTR on advertising light boxes back in 2007 can be used to power the entire Tesla fleet in Hong Kong from 0% to 100% every single day!!!
And this is just the report in 2007, before giant TVs have been installed in almost every station. Even up till now, the MTR website has nothing but this under
Corporate Responsibility:
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Image from MTR |
Has that actually saved energy? Sure, but in their
2013 Annual Report (p.165), there is only increase and not decrease since 2011 in "Energy and utilitites. In the 2013
Sustainability Report (p.50) "Use for Railway Operations", has this included the electricity used for advertising light boxes?
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Image from MTR 2013 Sustainability Report |
Which goes to show that, the electricity that an EV uses is exactly as it uses, but for trains, hidden expenses and electricity uses are not something everyone can see.
Others will say, "well, who cares? If you consider the total number of passengers on MTR each day (318,000
patronage), 61,180kWh is a minute figure. EVs still loses to trains in terms of per passenger-kilometre travelled."
Personally, I will say that's true, but here's an idea,
- Some people do need their cars, to get to places trains cannot, to carry pregnant women, babies, prams, shopping, etc. that one cannot handle or afford on a train,
- Many people simply want a car
For these people, a car becomes a necessity and it is not a matter of persuasion that can change this need. Thus, there is irrational to consider arguing against the ownership of cars to this group of people, instead, one should encourage this group of car buyers or owners to shift to more environmentally-friendly cars. As to what are "environmentally-friendly cars", we will look into that near the end. The bottom line is, this does not mean they will definitely drive their car daily or non-stop, they just tend to take public transportation less frequently. Then, are these these people wrong in they opt for EVs?
In response to 2), "in a country that relies heavily on green sources of energy, EVs make sense. Till then, what EVs do is just shifting, not reducing, pollution." This statement is correct to an extend that EVs work best together with renewable energies which we have previously mentioned, but it is wrong to say EVs is only shifting and not reducing pollution. A key factor that plays a tremendous part is the education behind the owning of EVs. Owners of EVs are often themselves environmentally caring people and they work hard towards a greener future through educating the public. I, am of course among them, but take a fellow Tesla Model S owner
Leilani Munter as an example,
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Image from Leilani Munter's Twitter |
read the above and you'll know,
we don't just talk the talk, we walk the walk. If someone thinks that "what EVs do is just shifting, not reducing, pollution", then they have forgotten this key human factor, a spirit deep and strong within us, that makes us bonded and iron-willed in an attempt to make a difference and change the world! Imagine that we change policy makers' mind to switch from fossil fuel to 100% renewable energy! This doesn't mean you must own an EV to become an environmental advocate, but if you do own one, you are most likely one of us.
In response to 3) and 4), "you can have all cars as EVs. But if your EVs are running on every generated by say, fossil fuels, you're back to square 1", "Your EVs are using the energy generated inefficiently upstream in the first place. You can't compare bread with flour." Of course this is true, particularly if the electricity is generated from coal. Tessum, Hill and Marshall (2014) recently published their research and generated fierce discussions on the internet. However, most people only read the secondary sources such as
The Economist without actually going into the primary source and read the paper itself.
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Image from Tessum, Hill & Marshall (2014, p. 2) |
You see, the debate on EV vs ICE vehicles has been around since
EV has returned to the scene in the late 1990s. Oil and traditional car companies have spare no expense in attacking the revival of electric cars because they knew EVs will be a real threat to their business. One obvious fact is that they sponsored researchers to write papers using misguided data, the other is rephrasing trustworthy research in favour of their own stand.
In my opinion,
Tessum, Hill & Marshall (2014)'s paper is a fair, objective one and I do not think it is going against EVs at all. The bottom line is, they "estimate total fuel supply chain air pollutant emissions for scenarios where 10% of US projected vehicle miles traveled in year 2020 are driven in 1 of 11 types of passenger cars" and this is a projection into the future of scenarios with ALL 10% vehicles miles travelled running on a SINGLE possible fuel! What they are trying to prove is that
an EV's environmental-friendliness depends on the fuel mix (
full report here), that coal is the worst and renewables are the best in terms of PM2.5 and Ozone emission, so the US government should spend more on increasing renewable energy production. How is that a research against EV?
Also, the research only focused on PM2.5 and Ozone, but has not touched on Green House Gases (GHG) such as CO2 emission, which will surely bring Gasoline and Diesel deep red if there such a table. But who will consider this, right?
To determine whether you are using cleaner or dirtier electricity for your EVs, you must get hold of some data from your country.
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Improving in most emissions
Image from enb.gov.hk |
Emission of air pollutants for local power plants in Hong Kong looks good, and will look to improve further.
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Total GHG trends down once again after 2007
Image from enb.gov.hk |
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Image from enb.gov.hk |
In Hong Kong, the current fuel mix is 23% nuclear, 22% natural gas and 55% coal, oil and renewable energy. Not the best looking when compared to
California as shown below (data from U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA),
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Image from eia.gov |
but not the worst you get like
South African, Poland, China and Australia, as shown below.
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Image from World Coal Association |
Comparing with some of the largest countries in the world, Hong Kong is at my personal "acceptable but must work much harder" level. So, do you think I should drive an EV in Hong Kong? Or should I wait for the percentage of coal use to fall to 10% in the overall fuel mix?
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My email and form response to enb.gov.hk back on 17 Jun 2014
Image from Locky's English Playground |
My answer is, I played my part in suggesting the ratio of future fuel mix in the generation of electricity in Hong Kong back in June because I know situation must improve, and I have promoted this to my friends back then.
What have you done for your home country lately?
Finally, here's an upcoming documentary in 2015 that everyone must watch, I have promoted this many times on Twitter and it is the right time to promote again here. Produced by the Award-winning director of "The Cove"
Louie Psihoyos, together with racer
Leilani Munter,
Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Tesla Model S,
Racing Extinction exposes the dark side of the human world, including mass extinctions, animal rights, illegal animal hunting and trafficking and climate change.
Share this documentary and this blog post around if you want to play a part in protecting the environment.
Vocabulary:
patronage -- (n) [U] formal the business given to a shop or restaurant, etc. by its customers
talk the talk, walk the walk -- informal If you say that someone talks the talk but does not walk the walk, you mean that they do not act in a way that agrees with the things they say:
Resources:
Benefits and Considerations of Electricity as a Vehicle Fuel @ U.S. Department of Energy
http://www.afdc.energy.gov/fuels/electricity_benefits.html
Elon Musk: The mind behind Tesla, SpaceX, SolarCity ...
+YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IgKWPdJWuBQ
Annual Report 2013 @MTR
https://www.mtr.com.hk/archive/corporate/en/investor/2013frpt_e/EMTRAR2013F.pdf
Energy Efficiency of Tesla Electric Vehicles @Tesla Motors
http://www.teslamotors.com/goelectric/efficiency
MTR under fire over energy 'waste'
http://studentstandard.thestandard.com.hk/listern_read/PDF/s/file_20071002212433070554.pdf
Promotion of Electric Vehicles in Hong Kong @ Environmental Protection Department
http://www.epd.gov.hk/epd/english/environmentinhk/air/prob_solutions/promotion_ev.html
MTR > Energy-efficient LED Lighting @MTR
http://www.mtr.com.hk/en/customer/community/LED_lighting.html
MTR Annual Report 2013
https://www.mtr.com.hk/archive/corporate/en/investor/2013frpt_e/EMTRAR2013F.pdf
Tessum, Hill & Marshall (2014) : Life cycle air quality impacts of conventional and alternative light-duty transportation in the United States
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2014/12/10/1406853111.full.pdf
The ‘electric cars aren’t green’ myth debunked +Shrink That Footprint
http://shrinkthatfootprint.com/electric-cars-green
Electric Cars Carbon Emissions Around the Globe +Shrink That Footprint
http://shrinkthatfootprint.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Shades-of-Green-Full-Report.pdf
Cleaner than what? Why an electric car may be much dirtier than a petrol one @ The Economist
http://www.economist.com/news/science-and-technology/21636715-why-electric-car-may-be-much-dirtier-petrol-one-cleaner-what?fsrc=scn%2Ffb%2Fte%2Fpe%2Fed%2Fcleanerthanwhat
1990s: Revival of interest @ Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_electric_vehicle#1990s:_Revival_of_interest
Future Fuel Mix For Electricity Generation Consultation Document
http://www.enb.gov.hk/sites/default/files/en/node2605/Consultation%20Document.pdf
California - State Energy Profile Overview @U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)
http://www.eia.gov/state/?sid=CA&CFID=18332776&CFTOKEN=e9c80cdc737a841-4C379054-237D-DA68-24FABA1FBA851A26&jsessionid=8430b1ca3a6ef5e6159e7857c512e6b4020c#tabs-4
coal electricity, coal power plants @World Coal Association
http://www.worldcoal.org/coal/uses-of-coal/coal-electricity/
"Racing Extinction" Trailer (formerly "6")
+YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lP3eFK_ZBw
Racing Extinction Official Website
http://www.racingextinction.com/
Louie Psihoyos @Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/louie.psihoyos?ref=ts&fref=ts
Elon Musk @ Twitter
https://twitter.com/elonmusk
Leilani Munter @ Twitter
https://twitter.com/LeilaniMunter
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english-chinese-traditional/patronage_2
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/talk-the-talk-walk-the-walk