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| This is a discussion on Elon Musk: "Gasoline should probably be $10 a gallon" within the Other Cars forums, part of the PriusChat Forums category; Elon Musk: "Gasoline should probably be $10 a gallon" Elon Musk: Gas should cost $10 per gallon | Green Tech ... |
Elon Musk: "Gasoline should probably be $10 a gallon"
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| Senior Member Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: Seattle area, WA
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Friends: 3 | Elon Musk: "Gasoline should probably be $10 a gallon" Elon Musk: Gas should cost $10 per gallon | Green Tech - CNET News Well, I'm in support of gas going up to maybe $8/gal or more to change American habits and encourage use of carpooling and public transportation, $10/gal is a bit too far, IMHO. It's not surprising he's making these self-serving statements. Here are two quotes from him: Quote:
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I'm sure the latter will stir up opinion amongst PCers. Last edited by cwerdna; 06-18-2009 at 02:52 AM. Reason: edited title | ||
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| | #2 | |
| Human - Animal Hybrid Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Carmichael, CA
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| | #3 | |
| Member Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: Kriti, Hellas
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I'm all in favor of $10.00 per gallon gas. That's closer to what it's actually worth. And yes, it will hurt. Good. It needs to hurt. EDIT: I should mention that gas where I'm stationed has been as high as $7.50 per gallon, after the conversion from euro/liter to dollars/gallon was made. And yes, it sucked. But we drove a little less, found ways to carpool and in general compensated for it. Last edited by quillsinister; 06-16-2009 at 03:40 AM. | |
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Friends: 3 | Firstly, I love the Prius. I believe it is the best consumer hybrid on the market. However, I agree with the 2nd comment... sorta. Actually it's 0% electric currently. It has a hybrid drivetrain where all the electricity generated is in one way or another derived from fossil fuels. (For now.) It isn't a hybrid-source vehicle at all. It is simply making the maximum economically feasible efficient use of the fossil fuel powering the car. That being said, it's also just a nice car! I would love to have a Tesla and get some solar panels, but I simply cannot afford that. We will have to wait for technologies to get cheaper and companies to get their crap together. I still can't get over GM selling the NiMH patent to big oil, and then having to make a lithium battery because the oil companies won't sell them the right to use enough KW to do what they need to do. (Propel the vehicle 100-150mi like the EV-1) In fact, I wonder how the gen3 Prius got it's larger capacity battery. I know on the gen2 they had to pay, and only got the right to 1.3kwh (I could be slightly off here, but the point remains.) So, basically our Prius has even been held back by big oil.
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| | #5 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Philadelphia
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Friends: 0 | While it would be nice to see more hybrids being purchased now, we will see it in the future. It should not be done through forcing people by raising fuel prices, that will cripple the country and further damage the economy because all the trucking companies and independent drivers can not afford $10 a gallon fuel. The price of everything will go through the roof and no one will be able to afford a hybrid because they will be paying $15 for a loaf of bread. A lot of businesses will go under. Who will be able to afford a $15 cup of Starbucks. The way to encourage people to switch to hybrid technology is to give tax incentives, rebates, gas guzzler turn in programs. With good incentives that help, not hurt, people will want to go green. Everyone will need a new car eventually, if the incentives are there to help make the Hybrid as affordable as other cars, people will switch. Not having to put 20-30 gallons into my car each week at $3/gallon was incentive. I didn't spend over $25,000 for my 2010 Prius to have the my fuel cost go back to $90 a week because the oil companies are loosing revenue and they want to jack up the cost so they can still afford their $400 million retirement plans for CEO's. Sigh, this is so frustrating. |
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| | #6 | |
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For what it's worth, it needs to start sucking for CEOs as well. And the longer they bitch and moan about their corporate retreats and executive perks and eight-figure Christmas bonuses, the worse it will be when the vast majority of the population really starts feeling the pain in a way that can't be eased with financial sleight-of-hand. We've gone down that road before, and it always ends bloody. The American people can be a part of this process by turning off the T.V. and reading up on both exactly what our species is facing and the various mechanisms that citizens of a democracy can use to force the hand of those in power (there are some really great options). Fortunately, the Pentagon has been working up plans for everything from Peak Oil to dealing with climate refugees (many of them are public domain and unclassified, if you'd care to read them), but nobody in office has been moving on this because they're all too frightened of pissing off their constituency and not getting reelected. Sustained pressure from the American people is the only thing that can compel them to move. Last edited by quillsinister; 06-16-2009 at 04:12 AM. | |
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| | #7 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2009 Location: Chicagoland
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A gasoline tax can be brought at a controlled, predictable rate too (by varying the taxes to offset flucuations in oil prices). So people, and automakers, could see what's coming and start making buying (and manufacturing) decisions in advance. It would reduce the flucuations we've seen from the free market, like last summers extreme runup in gas prices. I've detailed this in other posts. Your point about trucks/transportation is a good one. But maybe we need to let the cost of transporting goods increase to encourage more local goods. The idea that we're getting produce from around the world makes no sense to me, something is wrong when that is cost effective. Tough topic. Last edited by Midpack; 06-16-2009 at 07:09 AM. | |
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| | #8 | ||
| Cat Lovers Against the Bomb Join Date: Feb 2004 Location: Spokane, WA
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Musk seems confused by the fact that the Prius goes into pure electric mode (what sci-fi fans like to call "stealth") for very brief periods. But what he might not understand is that the battery and the electric motors are operating all the time, in conjunction with the gas engine. It is a hybrid. As for the price of gas, as long as the price does not reflect the true cost (environmental, military, etc.) we are dumping a tremendous burden on generations yet to come. We are, literally, stealing from our children and their children. As heavy as the burden of high gas price is to the poor, cheap gas now is a heavier burden by far on future generations. I advocate a $15/gallon tax, on top of the cost of production, refining, distribution, and (reasonable) profit for the oil companies
__________________ Daniel Primary car: 100% Electric 2003 Porsche 911 Carrera. Estimated range at 55 mph: 81 miles total or 64 miles to 80% discharge. Top speed 70 mph. Secondary car: Zap Xebra SD, also 100% electric. 1.9 cents per mile. Range: 40 miles total, or 32 miles to 80% discharge. Top speed 35 mph. Faster downhill. Both EVs use electrons generated from water power. Gas guzzler for when I have to travel farther than 60 miles: 2004 Prius. "If voting changed anything, they'd make it illegal." -- Emma Goldman "Anyone who has ever looked into the glazed eyes of a soldier dying on the battlefield will think long and hard before starting a war." -- Otto von Bismarck | ||
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| | #9 | |
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It's important to remember that the electric parts of the Prius are there to facilitate the use of a more efficient engine, and to use that engine more efficiently. They are not there as an end in themselves. The more electric power you use, the worse mileage you get, in general. The battery does mean that at very low loads, the car can turn off the engine and run electric for a while, then later run the engine to recharge, which over the whole cycle is more efficient than running the engine with the throttle barely open. I recall that there have been studies showing that there are diminishing returns for a charge-sustaining (i.e. not plug-in) hybrid, as you increase the battery size. The size we have is a reasonable compromise between capacity for hill climb assistance and the weight that the car has to carry around. It's obviously not much use for plugging in as-is, since the car uses all the capacity that it's willing to use within about a mile. It doesn't use all the capacity of the battery, to extend the battery's life. A charge-depleting hybrid (one which doesn't actively recharge the battery to a high-level) or an EV will typically drain its battery more deeply, at the cost of reduced battery life. | |
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