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Scientific American article about EV's and Plug-Ins

Discussion in 'Gen 1 Prius Plug-in 2012-2015' started by Michaelvickdog123, Aug 10, 2010.

  1. Michaelvickdog123

    Michaelvickdog123 New Member

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    There's an interesting article in the July 2010 issue of Scientific American entitled, "The Dirty Truth about Plug-In Hybrids"

    Before you flame...I didn't write the article. But I do not think that Scientific American has any axe to grind, so I tend to believe their numbers.

    The jist of the article is - They compare EV and plug-in hybrids (to conventional hybrids like the Prius), in terms of gasoline savings (directly/indirectly from oil) and reductions in carbon. But the important part of their findings/comparisons is - How much EV's or plug-ins save in terms of gas, or reduced carbon strongly depends on the region of the country you live in.

    Some select findings include:

    (1) New York region (where 67.2% of their electricity comes from oil...I'm shocked!!):

    - 4.3% higher carbon output from EV
    - 19.0% higher carbon output from plug-in hybrid
    - 8.6% reduction in gasoline (ie oil) usage from EV
    - 10.9% reduction in gasoline (oil) useage from plug-in


    ....keep in mind that 67.2% of the electricity generated in this region is derived from oil (not hydro, not coal, not nuc and not natural gas).

    (2) In the Mid-Atlantic (where I live) the numbers are:

    - 1.2% lower carbon output from EV
    - 6.1% higher carbon output from plug-in hybrid
    - 45% reduction in gasoline usage from EV
    - 95.9% reduction in gasoline useage from plug-in

    (3) Sotuheast:

    - 2.4% higher carbon output from EV
    - 14.4% higher carbon output from plug-in hybrid
    - 46.7% reduction in gasoline usage from EV
    - 98.9% reduction in gasoline useage from plug-in

    (4) Cal/Oregon:


    - 15.3 % reduction in carbon output from EV
    - 26.5% reduction in carbon output from plug-in hybrid
    - 47% reduction in gasoline usage from EV
    - 99.6% reduction in gasoline useage from plug-in

    etc

    etc
     
    2 people like this.
  2. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Hey Vickdog,
    I could only read the begining of the article on-line as it was a for pay site.

    The Dirty Truth about Plug-In Hybrids: Scientific American

    Can you share the source of some of the data that seems to contradict other models? Does gasoline really mean any gound based fuel like methane in many of the statistical areas? If that is the case, they really are poisoning the data. Is the only pollutant they considered CO2? How did they model the changing grid in the future? How do they find plug-ins dirtier than baseline but evs cleaner?
     
  3. Michaelvickdog123

    Michaelvickdog123 New Member

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    Hi Green,

    Ya, some of the results were rather shocking to me, too. The only way I can justify some of the findings (most do make sense, however), is the source used to generate electrical energy to re-charge the plug-in, or EV. I was shocked to learn that 67% of the energy in NY (state and city) comes from oil. Yikes! Who uses oil these days to generate electricity.

    To answer your question - some of the graphs used were obtained from Nissan, GM and Toyota. I would assume that the energy source for the different regions is in the public domaign (probably on some Government web site...although not specifically mentioned). The author of the article was, Michael Moyer.

    I think Sci American is pretty objective, and in general, they seem to do a prtty thorough job....although usually written so that the lay-person can understand.


    The bottom line from the SA article (which seems logical to me, and is something I mentioned in prior posts) is -

    The amount of savings (with respect to a hybrid), ie both environmental as well as economic, depends on where one lives, and the source for the electrical energy used to power the grid that they plug into. Not all savings will be equal, or as big as some might believe. In some cases, depending upon where you live, driving a hybrid may actually produce a smaller carbon footprint, with respect to a plug-in or EV. That one result boggles my mind.
     
  4. Zythryn

    Zythryn Senior Member

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    You should be shocked. According to Energy Information Administration (EIA) | State/Territory Energy Profiles | Energy Data, Information, and Maps , petroleum products account for less than 1/2 of 1% of electrical generation in the state of New York. My understanding is Florida is one of the bigger oil users for electrical generation (don't ask me why;)).

    I also really don't buy that a PHEV saves more gasoline than an EV.

    Now, I am not saying there was an agenda. But, it is very poorly edited, written and researched, or very very poorly explained.
     
  5. Zythryn

    Zythryn Senior Member

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    I forgot to mention, I do agree that the amount of saving (both $ and CO2) does depend on the source and cost of your electricity.
     
  6. Michaelvickdog123

    Michaelvickdog123 New Member

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    My bad. Reading the fine print, so to speak:

    The energy % numbers reported by SA article, are actually reporting where the excess (electrical) capacity is likely to come from. So, my bad in saying that these are the current sources...but should have said, based on scientific studies, this is where/how they expect to meet future demand.

    The exact SA wording is:

    "To determine the sources of energy that will power the coming fleet of electric vehicles, researchers modeled the additional strain that a fleet of electric vehicles would put on the grid. They founded that the added demand would likely be met by plants burning fossil fuels (ie both oil and coal). In fact, in the 6 regions who's numbers are highlighted in yellow, heavy contributions from coal mean that plug-in cars will emit at least as much in the way of greenhouse gases as would an ordinary hybrid"
     
  7. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    That must be why the numbers seem so wrong. They are. No one is going to build new petroleum power plants, and those grid charging will hopefully use off peak power.
     
  8. richard schumacher

    richard schumacher shortbus driver

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    Burning oil to generate electricity is madness. All of those plants should be replaced with non-fossil plants, or at the very least converted to natural gas.

    My EV will save 100% in CO2 emissions 'cos my house uses 100% non-fossil electricity.
     
  9. cycle11111

    cycle11111 New Member

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    I have listened to/ or read numerous utilities being interviewed in print or online(one was interviewed at Green Drive by Tony F) and in general terms few of them seem overly concerned about EVs in the near or med term. I have not heard one mention they will be building new plants and they assume off peak power will be mostly used or that pricing will push off peak use and that clearly will cause no new power plants.

    Poor article with some bad assumptions.
     
  10. hyo silver

    hyo silver Awaaaaay

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    What about the energy used to refine, transport, and store gasoline? Was that factored in?
     
  11. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    I linked the best article I have read on this topic last week to the forum. At least in CA, the additional demand is mostly anticipated to be met with NG, but with the proviso that as the demand is folded into baseload the emissions are dirtier (think coal.)

    My personal enviro standpoint is (EV+home PV) is a great goal to look forward to. For me, home PV this summer, and an EV in a couple of years when low(er) priced, micro cars with ~ 50 mile range are available. I'm hopeful the Toyota iQ EV fits the bill.
     
  12. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    This has nothing to do with more power plants, but rather *how* the electricity is made. Your mistake is a common one.
     
  13. Zythryn

    Zythryn Senior Member

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    Ah, that makes some sense then.
    However, this leads to the same logical inconsistency as Sages thread last week.
    It is assuming a high percentage of vehicles on the road being replaced with EV/PHEV (do the mention what marketshare this is for?).
    In Sages references, they basically were modeling 100% EV use in 2050 and current day's power grid.

    So reading either Sage's references, or the SA article about some day decades in the future really has no relevance to an EV 'going live' on the grid today.

    I definitely agree it shows how desperately we need to upgrade our grid before EVs reach a significant market share (30-50%).
     
  14. timo27

    timo27 Member

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    A little--but only a little--off-topic here - did the article address the potential strain on the grid? "Grid anxiety?" All it takes in the northeastern US is a hot summer day for some areas to undergo rolling brownouts. Add to that a substantial number of plug-in EVs, and, well, let's just say I hope they seriously incentivize charging during off-peak hours.

    Also, here in MD, about 80% of our electricity comes from coal (the bulk of the rest from one nuclear plant). Although it varies a lot from place to place, on the whole coal is still by far the biggest single primary energy source for electrical generation in the US, and likely to remain so for some time. Coal is very ungood from many standpoints besides CO^2 emissions--i.e., particulates, mercury, heavy metals in the fly ash, mountain-top removal mining, acid precip, acid mine drainage, people getting blown to kingdom come in the mines or dying slowly from black lung, etc., so on and so forth.

    I don't have access to the whole article, but I do agree that where you get your electricity from should make a big difference. Seems like the best areas for wide-scale adoption of PEVs (at least until we get a good wind/solar infrastructure in place--don't hold your breath) would be the Pac NW and other areas with lots of hydropower. As far as natural gas and oil go, I think it's nonsensical to burn them to generate heat to boil water to spin a turbine to generate electricity to charge a battery to power a private auto--yeah, yeah, I know about the 'economy of scale' in a big power plant, but you're still fighting the second law of thermodynamics at every step of the way. And the people (and lakes, fish, streams and mountains) near the sources of mining or the power plants get screwed.

    I'd think it better to go the 'conventional' hybrid route if using oil, or mod the engine to burn natural gas (which is not a difficult thing to do; the problem is, again, in the infrastructure).

    Damn that second law of thermodynamics. Can't Congress repeal it or something?
     
  15. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    My understanding is that hydropower is used as baseload and is maximized already, so even though it makes up a large fraction of some NW US areas, it may not play any part in meeting EV.

    Zythryn, I'll have to go back to that article, I thought different levels of EV penetration were modeled, and the gross conclusion was that more penetration led to increasing transition from marginal to baseload supply.

    addendum: http://pubs.its.ucdavis.edu/download_pdf.php?id=1145
     
  16. Zythryn

    Zythryn Senior Member

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    My apologies, you are correct, I missed the chart in which they ramped up market penetration.
    In the first two thirds of the paper they use a 50% replacement of 'vehicle miles' and in other places a 100% market share.
    Interesting thing is, in figure 12, it shows how load-leveling (off peak charging) BEVs actually decrease plant CO2 emissions until about about 25% and doesn't increase above the baseline until about 50% market penetration.

    I would still like to see them take into account the inefficiencies of off peak power generation which are alleviated by off peak charging. Or perhaps they did, wrapped into figure 12?
     
  17. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    ^^ If I understand the article correctly, at low penetration demands NG is the source fuel; and as penetration increases coal appears because of the utilities' ability to anticipate demand and fold it into baseload.

    What inefficiency are you talking about ?
     
  18. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    I am aware of some oil based power plants in Florida. These are old plants that by virtue of being close to oil offloading terminals and far from cheap rail line access to coal, they selected oil (a long time ago). Since then, the high price of oil and the low price of natural gas has been driving the utilities to convert.

    What is the assumptions about the vehicle "replaced" by the EV or PHEV? A vehicle with the same mpg?.....or a vehicle with an expected big improvement in efficiency?
     
  19. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    ^^ Prius, I think.

    I am with Zythryn here. This is not a nail in the coffin of EV at all; it is an exhortation to clean up the grid or use clean home based energy like PV. However -- and this to me is the key point I was arguing last week -- it makes little sense to spend limited funds on EV now (whether personal or societal) before the grid is clean.

    This argument of course is an enviro one only.
     
  20. Zythryn

    Zythryn Senior Member

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    My understanding is that some types of plants are very inefficient when run in 'standby' mode. I believe this is mainly with regard to coal plants. As coal plants take hours to shut down, and hours again to gear up to full power, most utilities will simply run them at a low level of efficiency. Basically this 'wastes' the power.
    I believe this is also why many studies have shown the current (no pun intended;)) grid would be sufficient for up to about 20% market share of PHEVs (as long as they are all charged at night).
    Unfortunately I haven't been able to find much about this, which is why I am hoping the will address it in their next paper.